What’s Driving Your Organization?
Lee Crumbaugh
Strategy consultant, business coach, facilitator, and speaker. Strategic planning, decision-making, and marketing expert. Author.
Ever notice how some organizations generally seem to be on a positive trajectory, while others are constantly playing catch-up, encountering roadblocks and struggling to get on a better track? ?Among the former are Proctor & Gamble, General Electric, Southwest Airlines and Oracle. ?Among the latter are Sears Holdings, BlackBerry and Sony.
Looking deeper, you may also notice that some of the organizations that appear to have their act together at times have had to do a major reset to get back on an upward path. ?Examples that come to mind are IBM moving to services, Starbucks going back to basics and Apple pushing beyond its Mac niche market and launching the iPod.
As the leaders of struggling companies will attest, it's a very difficult task to right a sinking ship. ?Where to focus and what to do are paramount issues. ?Obviously, business as usual is not working and incrementalism is not the answer. ?For the likes of IBM and Apple, the situation demanded a reinvention of the company.
KEY QUESTIONS
In thinking about how to avoid going down the road of a Sears Holdings, Radio Shack, Polaroid, Lehman Brothers, Coldwater Creek or Eastman Kodak, or to know when and how to do a major reset and what it should entail, we have come up with a set of questions that we think every organizational leader should ask:
Our premise is that every organization has primary drivers that determine what it does and how well it does it. For sure, management would like to think that these drivers are in its control, and that they either are moving the organization to greater success or are being shielded or mitigated so they do not preclude success. ?However, as the exhibit below shows, organizations are potentially subject to a variety of negative drivers, more self-inflicted than external, that produce dysfunction and can lead to failure.
These negative drivers are all about change, its effects, and the organization's response.
WHAT'S MISSING HERE?
Change is inevitable; it affects all organizations.??"Most of us fear change. Even when our minds say change is normal, our stomachs quiver at the prospect. But for strategists and managers today, there is no choice but to change."?-?Robert Waterman Jr.
领英推荐
The negative drivers listed above are the change itself and how the organization adapts to the change. Confusion, inaction, unthinkingly following others, decisions made from the hip - these are the result of the organization not putting the process of anticipating and adapting to change at the top of its list of priorities.
What's missing from the picture is the process that will best position an organization for anticipating and adapting to change: strategic planning coupled with strategic management. ?At each step depicted below, the strategic planning process and effective plan implementation enable adaptation to change.
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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:
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NOT ENOUGH
Yet, alone, the strategic planning and implementation process as described above is not enough to assure greater success, because strategies and action steps in and of themselves do not harness and sync with other organizational planning processes. ?
The answer is for organizational leaders to engage in strategic management, "The comprehensive collection of ongoing activities and processes that organizations use to systematically coordinate and align resources and actions with mission, vision and strategy throughout an organization," according to the?Balanced Scorecard Institute. ?Strategic managers understand that?the core strategic planning process needs to drive and inform all other organizational planning processes.
As the hierarchy of planning processes shown above illustrates, all other organizational planning processes - from longer term to shorter term, from innovation, facilities, programs and marketing to budgeting - need to gain their essential focus and direction from the strategic plan's vision and strategies.
The question is, how do organizations function in a highly effective fashion, much less change as they must when the world in which they operate is changing rapidly, without pursuing a current strategic plan? Without the driving force of a shared vision of future success and strategies to move the organization to the vision, what guides all other organizational planning processes?
We think this aspect of the value of strategic planning and strategic management is obvious. Is it obvious to you? Clearly, many leaders do not understand the driving force of strategic planning, not just as an end in itself but for everything the organization does and chooses to do.
Educator, Facilitator, Listener | Co-Founder and President, LBL Strategies
1 年This is outstanding!