The CPO Series: Managing through periods of uncertainty - Strategy
Lisa Schneider and I have spent many hours discussing the CPO role, its key responsibilities and main challenges. Over the last 6 months or so, the context has frequently been around managing in tougher economic climates.
The output of those discussions is a series of posts that where we are excited to share our collective thinking on the topic. We will alternate publishing between our respective feeds and share accordingly. Please share any thoughts, comments or questions.
After a historic period of growth and investment, many technology leaders and executives are dealing with a new planning variable: Macro Economic Uncertainty. For many years, the CPO’s focus and attention has been against a stable economic backdrop. Relative stability enables greater risk taking, experimentation, and room to fail — but in times of uncertainty, leaders will not have that leeway.?
They’ll feel more pressure, more scrutiny, more reserving of cash, and greater demand for short-term results. That can play out as delays or cancellations of investment, a change in focus, less tolerance for experimentation, and shorter runway for results, along with hiring freezes or changes in staffing. If you haven’t led through a downturn before, it’s crucial to understand how your leadership style and attention needs to adjust with the change in circumstances.
C-Suite leaders and especially CPOs can navigate this period with principles that will hopefully not only allow the organization to survive a downturn, but provide a strengthened platform for growth in the future. This series on Leading Through Uncertainty covers four areas, following three key throughlines in each: #focus, #prioritization, and #communication. Below, we cover Strategic Planning, and subsequent articles will cover Leadership, Commercial and Finance, and User Focus.
Strategic Planning
Key stakeholders: C-Suite and Board
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Strategic planning is often thought of as a big exercise, and much OKR advice is around stretch goals. But when times are tough, it’s actually important that goals and priorities are focused and realistic since there will likely be more appetite for certainty in results. What you know now, what will decisively move the needle in the short term, and most critically how much runway you have, are all key factors in thinking about strategy with stronger than ever constraints. These constraints will indubitably mean fewer projects — pet projects and innovation may have to be set aside for a double-down on immediate commercialization. When having to make and defend these decisions, work closely with the CFO to get alignment on impact and prioritization so you’re not advocating alone.?
Focus:
Prioritization:
Communication:?
Next up: Leadership.
Product Leader
1 年“PPC > SC” being the problem totally makes sense. Except it seems hard to define Sales Cycle period? In my experience SC is more of a free form, art vs science process, that runs without much of a schedule. How important is it to get SC on a “schedule” or try to reign it in other ways?