What Most Brands Miss in Their Strategic Plans
Kevin Namaky
Consumer Brand Leader, Trainer, CEO at Gurulocity Brand Management Institute
With most brands wrapping up 2023 planning, I want to address a common mistake that I see in many strategic plans (a.k. the brand plan). Whether you are writing a long-term strat plan for the very first time, or even if you've written them numerous times, you're sure to learn a new trick here today...
Although I hesitate to call it a trick—it's a really powerful technique that creates clarity and alignment among your senior stakeholders. Unfortunately, too few strategic plans use this technique.
But First
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The Problem With Most Strategic Plans
Open up ten different strat plan documents and probably nine of them will use a traditional OGSM format (objectives, goals, strategies, measures) or something similar. While the OGSM template is relatively easy to fill out and understand, it has a couple of drawbacks that I'm not a fan of.
First, OGSMs tend to be vague. Most plans are written at such a high level, that they actually provide very little direction in terms of appropriate business action. This leads to everything under the sun becoming an acceptable project, as anyone could make an argument that their pet project fits under one of the listed strategies. Think strategies like, "win at shelf", or "innovate".
Second, most OGSMs do a poor job of forcing you to focus on the best strategies. There's a big leap from the objectives to the strategies, with little real examination of what the individual strategies are meant to solve for.
While each of these problems deserve their own lesson, I'm addressing the second issue today. You'll learn how to choose the right strategies, which actually starts with choosing the right key business issues.
What Most Brands Miss in Their Strategic Plans
The short answer: they haven't thought enough about the right key business issues to address. Some of this comes from laziness with objectives. If your objective is something like grow sales, then that doesn't tell you much about how to grow your business. So the first step is choosing a clear vision for what the future of the brand looks like. Again, specifics matter.
But if you have a clear vision, then the very next thing to sort out before strategies is:
What key issues do we need to overcome in order to achieve our vision?
If you and your team can agree on the key issues first, then a couple of really important things will happen:
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Do not underestimate the power of those two things working in your favor.
And that's the exact reason why I'm not a fan of the traditional OGSM. The template I recommend has an additional column before strategies where you literally write in the key issues to address.
You are forced to document the key issues. Everyone sees them, and they scream loudly what your strategies should be. Everyone gets it.
A Quick Video Lesson on Selecting Key Issues
We recently published a sample video lesson on this topic, taken from one of our live workshops. You can check it out on our blog here along with a written transcript.
Part of being a strategist is learning to ask the right questions. And I hope this newsletter and video help you do just that.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Hi, I'm Kevin! I'm the founder and CEO of the?Gurulocity Brand Management Institute , a consumer marketing education company that trains and consults for notable brand teams including Kimberly-Clark, Scotts Miracle-Gro, Bolthouse Farms, Ancestry.com, Johnson & Johnson, Sephora and Gorilla Brands.
I'm also a featured instructor for the American Marketing Association, lecture at the IU Kelley School of Business, and have been featured in Ad Age, Forbes, Fast Company, Business Insider and the CMO Council. I previously worked for 20 years in the corporate and agency world growing notable consumer brands.