How to Build a Project Plan for an Ambiguous Innovation Challenge
Kevin Namaky
Consumer Brand Leader, Trainer, CEO at Gurulocity Brand Management Institute
If you aren’t sure how to structure your next innovation project, use these steps to gain forward momentum.
If you’re in a leadership role, your team will often look to you for guidance on how to move forward when the right answers aren’t obvious. But judging from 20 years of experience working with Fortune 500 business leaders on strategy and innovation projects, most leaders I know dread ambiguity.
Innovation projects in particular present some of the most ambiguous situations. After all, innovation is about creating something new. And if something is new, there’s less of a chance that a predecessor has plotted out a clear example of how to tackle the challenge.
Working?in innovation, I found that one method in particular greatly helped cut through ambiguity, lay out a clear project plan, and align stakeholders to the objectives and plan required to make it happen. This method involves five key steps to help you lay out the project plan that your team needs:
1. Clearly define the starting point
Just like plotting a course on a map, the first thing you must know is your starting point. More specifically, you need to understand the business context and specific challenge (or opportunity) the business seeks to solve through innovation. Without this, your project plan could steer the team astray and render everyone’s hard work useless to the business.
A simple yet effective way to get everyone on the same page is to review any work done to date, interview the key stakeholders to get their input, and craft a sharp innovation project brief. The brief should articulate the specific business reason the project exists (business problem or opportunity), acknowledge relevant previous work, define what success looks like (clear deliverables/outcomes), and note any scope guidelines or boundaries.
2. Outline the outstanding questions
In order to bring key collaborators along on your journey, I recommend you begin step two as a small-group brainstorm (or you can solicit questions via survey/email). Given the specific brief from step one, the team should now create a list of the key questions that remain unanswered. Questions from this list will serve as the basis for creating the actual plan in the next step.
Here are just a few examples of the kinds of questions you might come up with:
Essentially, you are breaking the bigger ambiguous challenge into manageable pieces, many of which you may already know how to answer.
3. Assign methods and activities
Now that you have a clear sense of the questions that the team must answer, you should combine your expertise with that of others on your team to determine an effective way to answer each question. A question may be answered through a specific research method, analysis activity, etc. You may find it helpful to capture if a budget is required in order to complete the step.
Here is an example of how a single question might be broken down:
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It’s useful to create a table that includes each key question, the method or activity to answer it, and the deliverable at each step.
4. Right-size the plan
In an ideal world, you’d have plenty of time and money to thoroughly answer each and every possible question, providing 100% confidence in the answer you find and maximizing your likelihood of success. But in the real world, you don’t always have the luxury of unlimited resources.
Larger companies with deep pockets and high expectations tend to run more project steps in order to reduce risk. Often the thinking is that you don’t want to harm an established brand reputation or disappoint shareholders. However, smaller companies tend to reduce steps, with smaller budgets and a higher tolerance for risk — they don’t have as much existing brand reputation to risk and/or don’t have to answer to public shareholders.
After weighing the tradeoffs of answering each question, you might adjust your plan to eliminate certain steps or find ways to complete each step and answer some questions more efficiently.
5. Final alignment
The final step is to share the plan back with key stakeholders, particularly senior-level stakeholders whose buy-in is needed to move forward. If you’ve done your work to this point in a collaborative fashion?—?involving the core team in the thinking and interviewing senior stakeholders upfront?—?this step should be more of an update than a surprise.
It’s at this point you should combine the original project brief and the project plan you created into a single document — a project charter that can be officially approved for the team to pursue. This document now sets specific expectations for what business problem the team will solve, who will be involved, and how the process will work. It’s also important to acknowledge any tradeoffs made so senior leaders understand where there is risk.
During these share-outs, you should explain the deliverables and ask stakeholders if there is anything missing they feel is mission-critical. Discuss further any remaining tradeoffs if leadership still wants to move faster or cheaper.
No challenge is too ambiguous
Combining the five steps gives you a clear path to go from no project definition to a clear plan and team alignment. By following this approach, no challenge is too ambiguous to solve. Not only will you have a plan, but you will excite stakeholders and provide confidence in the path forward.
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This article was originally written by Kevin Namaky for?Fast Company. If you found the article helpful, click the like and share buttons. You can also?subscribe?to receive brand management tips, frameworks and videos.
Kevin Namaky is the CEO at the?Gurulocity Brand Management Institute, a marketing education company that delivers training for Fortune 500 clients. Kevin is also a featured instructor for the American Marketing Association, lectures at the IU Kelley School of Business, has written for Ad Age, Fast Company and Forbes, and is a member of the CMO Council. Kevin previously worked for 20 years in the corporate and agency world growing notable consumer brands. Connect with Kevin on?LinkedIn.
And then there are those of us who LOVE ambiguity! The gateway to innovation...
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3 年Creating a project plan for an ambiguous innovation challenge can be challenging. There are several ways to create a project plan for an ambiguous innovation challenge. The first step is to identify the innovation challenge, which requires identifying the goals that need to be achieved by the project. A definition of success and the capabilities that need to be developed in order to achieve the goal are also necessary. Using these elements as a basis, you can create a project plan with four phases: planning, execution, analysis and adaptation. These four phases are standard in project management and allow you to create relevant plans for an ambiguous innovation challenges. Kevin Namaky great post.
I help SFO leaders & families build, grow & protect their Single-Family Offices.
3 年Very well laid out approach Kevin Namaky. Breaking down a problem into manageable 'chunks' simplifies the process by enabling greater focus on a distinct area. I have a slightly different starting point; in that I start with the end in mind, by asking 2 questions: 1. What are we looking to solve? 2. Is it worth solving'? The first question aims to bring absolute clarity of what the end in mind is. The 2nd helps determine if the expected return (whatever it might be) justifies the potential resources to be utilised.