Our team has great strategy, but our goals never get accomplished

Our team has great strategy, but our goals never get accomplished

When a new goal is announced for a team, the obvious question is, “How are we going to get there?” A multi-day strategy session is held to brainstorm, explore alternatives, and establish objectives. Action plans are developed, team assignments are made, and the whole process is documented in detail and in color. Everyone is proud of their strategy, and they were energized throughout the process.?

A few months later, the everyday demands of work have crept back in, and the goal has moved to the fringes. It’s still there but doesn’t get as much attention, and it never gets the traction needed to accomplish it.??

Strategy is great and necessary, but it’s just a tool to achieve the result (the goal). By itself, it can become a distraction from the real work of accomplishment. It’s like riding an exercise bike at the gym; there’s plenty of activity, and everyone sweats a lot, but you end up in the same place you started.?

There are several reasons that teams don’t achieve their goals:?

  • There are too many goals.
  • The goals aren’t specific enough to know when you’ve reached them (“Make more money” vs. “Increase revenue by $50K by July 1”).?
  • The goals aren’t inspiring for the team members.?
  • Nobody’s tracking anything.?
  • There are no individual action plans leading to the goal.?
  • Urgent things distract everyone from important goal-related things.?
  • There’s no celebration when milestones are reached.?

Consider these processes to make it more likely that goals are consistently achieved:?

Set goals people care about.?Discuss them with the team before finalizing to get their input and energy.?

Put the goals in writing and make them visible.?Display the goal in public so they can be easily seen and referenced often.?

Measure more than just the final number.?Don’t just look at how close you are to the finish line; measure other factors: how the team is working together, how related processes are improving, how team members are handling burnout, etc.?

Be realistic in your strategy.?It’s good to be optimistic but consider various risks that could?occur: things taking longer than expected, changes in costs, unavailability of resources, stress, morale issues, etc.?

Use the goal to establish a clear line of sight to your destination but be willing to revise it if priorities change or you’re off target. Don’t be like the Titanic—ignoring unseen obstacles?in order to plow through toward the destination.?


FranklinCovey is the world’s most trusted provider of solutions that help organizations execute their strategy.

Our unique approach includes an execution system that’s been refined through more than 4,000 engagements. It includes a methodology and powerful technology that supports and reinforces the right kind of behavior change. A single metric—the?Execution Performance Score (XPS)—lets you track progress in real time across your whole organization.

For more information email us at [email protected] or visit our website www.franklincoveyme.com

Saadeddin Ishtaiwi

#Change_Management | #Business_Excellence | #EFQM | #Business_Coach & #Trainer | #Startup_coach | #Innovation | #Business_Ideation | #Digital business growth | #Startup_Entrepreneur

1 年

Even if the organization follows your way of solution. Still the main pillar of success is ,the strong leadership believing of the strategy. They the strongly believe in. They will create it and FOLLO UP the execution tell the succeed. they will create strategy to achieve shared goals let everyone wants to achieve their part of strategy by working hard willingly.

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