
|
Strategic
Planning
Strategic
planning can help an organization:
Solve Major organizational
problems. Every executive, no matter how proficient,
will have some organizational challenges. Organizations are about people
first and foremost, and they bring tangible obstacles inherent in humanity.
By going through a strategic planning process, identifying vision, mission
and goals, the effective executive can organize and motivate around these
core principles. He can better establish performance objectives and targets,
and can move his team in a united direction.
Make Decisions Across
Levels and Functions. Strategic planning involves a collaborative
process to focus around several key objectives. All by itself, almost
regardless of the outcome, strategic planning builds collaboration skills
throughout the organization. When handled well with positive outcomes,
strategic planning becomes the organizational success story and encourages
improved interfunctional decision making.
Improve Organizational
Performance. Absent the mission, vision, goals and objectives
that are produced from a strategic planning process, an organization has
little against which to measure performance. The old management axiom,
"That which we expect, we must inspect" is never truer than in this situation.
By measuring performance against objective standards, incentives will
be directed toward the right issues.
Deal Effectively With
Rapid Change. Strategic planning helps in dealing with change
in two ways. First, effective strategic planning involves a comprehensive
environmental scan in its earliest stages. This part of the process anticipates
change, and attempts to identify its likely consequences and provide intervention
strategies. By anticipating and preparing for change, there can be less
organizational disruption. Second, the strategic planning process builds
planning skills in other areas. When an organization is hit with unexpected
change, there is already an organizational culture of responsiveness.
Build Teamwork and Expertise.
An effective strategic planning process, as mentioned earlier, becomes
an organizational success story. Collaboration through the process builds
skills and relationships which can bear fruit in other areas. For example,
in one strategic planning process in which I was involved, an organization
brought employees from different departments together to strategize on
how to reduce unneeded duplication. Among the recommendations was a single
point of data entry for addresses, which was a data field that crossed
many agency lines. The same team
that developed the idea was charged with implementing it, and within a
short time had succeeding in crossing previously "sacred" organizational
turfs and making a significant change for the better.
Establish Priorities.
Even though all organizations attempt to develop team approaches to solving
problems, the devil is almost always in the details. Managers can have
a difficult time sorting through conflicting priorities among their subordinates.
Having a strategic plan helps prioritize projects and functions in ways
that minimize conflict to begin with, and makes the differentiation process
simpler. Whatever project best addresses the time sensitive priorities
of the plan takes precedence.
Make Today's Decisions
in Light of Future Consequences. Often, decision processes are
driven by the urgent,
not by the important. Having a comprehensive strategic plan helps
identify the long term consequences of decisions now. It tends to increase
the frame of reference and helps analyze decision options based on how
they impact the mission and goals of the organization.
For more information on the
strategic planning process, read these articles written by Wayne Parker:
Mission
Statements
Identifying
Organizational Values
Goal
Setting
Measuring
Performance
© COPYRIGHT 2003-2009 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED WAYNE C. PARKER
|