A great Kick-off - the smart way to launch a strategy
Peter Thommen
Giving an (un)fair competitive advantage to Retail business leaders | With methods from Futures Studies always be one leap ahead of the competition | Sustainably more market share, more sales, more profit.
Or about senseless CEO strategy roadshows
My vocation is to make companies fit for the future in the role of a sparring partner and to ensure true sustainability, i.e., in all three dimensions. Strategic Foresight is the method that enables a ?future-ready? strategy instead of a ?conventional? one. How this issubsequently is introduced and implemented is what this blog is about. I have seen (too) many Foresight projects, which were only done for the gallery and hardly led to actual activities. A strategy that doesn't really get off the ground in real day-to-day business is piecemeal at best, no matter how great and future-ready it looks on paper. At the end of the day, only what is done is decisive for the match! ?
Don’t get so caught up in planning that you forget about the people
In my observation, a strategy process usually works something like this: After C-level management has agreed with the board on longer-term goals and associated strategies in a process that lasted for weeks or months, with the involvement of consultants and other stakeholders, implementation primarily focuses on the ?technical implementation?, i.e., quantifying the goals and aligning them between the various functions and units. Good and widely used methods such as ?Objectives and Key Results? (OKR) or ?Balanced Scorecards? (BSC) are available for this purpose. Surprisingly, what is usually tackled only at the end, virtually as a last priority, is the information within the own company and the related question of how to get the ?employees on board?.
I don't know of any study and can't prove it, but my perception is that very often the CEO and/or the C-level management team visits the various organizational units in a so-called roadshow to give as many middle managers, team leaders and employees as possible a first-hand impression. In the best case, there is some form of dialog or feedback-round involved. This, however, serves only to get a feeling for how the whole thing is being received and where the shoe might pinch. It is obviously too late to incorporate this into the strategy. The goal behind this is praiseworthy, but how involved is middle management in this process and what is the benefit from the employees' point of view? Yes, the CEO was there, gave a (hopefully) good, inspiring speech about the future direction of the company, but what happens afterwards? My observation is that the organization is then in a state of waiting for things to happen, wondering what exactly this means for me or my team, and afterwards eagerly expecting to see what concrete things will come ?from the top?. As a result, most of the own organization becomes a ?strategy recipient? and is not (yet) involved and thus not part of the strategy.
Pictorially speaking, this is like when the helicopter appears with a big roar, raises dust everywhere, then moves on and the dust settles again afterwards.
At such events, it seems to me that people are forgotten because of being caught up in all the planning. The power, the competencies, the knowledge, the creativity and the ideas of the own people are only used in a rudimentary way, it is not really exploited. Maybe it is too strong a word, but I think this is nonsense. There are better ways, and more and more companies have recognized this and have long since been treading new paths.
The power of a great kick-off
I will not go into the ?technical implementation?, i.e., the entire ?plan-to-perform process? here. As I said, there are good instruments for this and, in my opinion, useful routines have been established in most companies, which are also well orchestrated by the CFO and the finance department. I will address the following three questions here:
At first glance, these are big questions. But I would like to claim here that there is a single, almost absurdly simple answer to them: With a great kick-off!?
A properly staged and well-thought-out kick-off event has the power to elevate middle management to the position of strategy bearer - rather than receiver - and to set in motion many smaller and larger bottom-up processes in addition to the top-down, which meaningfully complement the corporate strategy that the C-level itself could never be able to take care of. In addition, it literally gives motivated employees at all levels of the company a stage to show themselves and to be able to present themselves in a positive light. Pure ?empowerment?!
Everyone who has dealt with me in the last 10 years of my corporate career (i.e., at the very latest since my time in Russia) knows it: I am a passionate ?kick-off freak? and would like to encourage every executive to become aware of and use the power of such an event. It's not difficult, here's my quick guide for CEOs:
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What this sets in motion is what I call ?business and fun in its best mix?: the teams think about what the essence of their strategy is, how they will bring it to the stage and who will take in which role. They look left and right, see what others are doing, the coordination team comes up with all kinds of suggestions, and something unusual happens outside the usual routines. Under a certain time-pressure, which encourages creativity, business and fun mix in the best and most positive sense. In Group Shared Services, a mail from the USA suddenly appeared, with space suits purchased by the team there, inspiring local imitation by the teams in Poland and China, or when the Polish organization's self-built stage-ready space rocket made the rounds, it led to corresponding activities in the USA and China (and you know how good ideas can be perfected in China). Wonderful!
Of course, there are better and worse kick-offs, but with this kind of staging, a momentum builds up, nervousness here, anticipation there. As a rule, it is a success per se. It only becomes problematic if you do it too often and it becomes an ?annual routine? or it takes place in the same place, with the same pattern, then the magic gradually fades.
Finally, four examples that I remember well:
There are few limits to the imagination, except for one principle that must be paramount:?
It's the mix of business and fun that counts: Dry business-like PowerPoint presentations are just as ineffective as events where most of the focus is on fun and no longer on business strategy.
And the CEO, what is his role? He, like many others, has his appearance on stage, sometimes alone, sometimes with his team. In all other moments, he can talk to the middle managers, the team leaders and the employees in a much better, more relaxed way, perhaps feeling the pulse better and more authentically.
Long story short - here is my summary
What does it look like in your company? What experience do you have with kick-off events? I'm eager to hear your comments. Are you looking for the sparring of a ?C-level kick-off lover? who has as much enthusiasm as experience with this? Then network with me on LinkedIn or book a complimentary discovery call directly.
PS Let the future be your guide – the best in life is yet to come.
Executive Assistant to the Superintendent of Public Instruction | Office Management, Executive Support, Government Operations | Multilingual Professional with Over 10 Years of Experience
1 年Yup! Bravo!