A World of Opportunities Using SOAR
Joe Sprangel, DBA
Driving Profitability in Manufacturing by Integrating Sustainability and Operational Excellence. Strategy Trainer & Facilitator/Fractional Chief Strategy Officer | LinkedIn? Editorial Top Voice 2024
As a thought leader, author, educator, and consultant on humanist manufacturing, I write a weekly article that benefits leaders who want to improve their organizations using elements of my Humanist Manufacturing framework.
Furthering the Conversation
The use of the SOAR framework to develop a human-centered strategy continues.?Several recent have been to focus on an overview of the framework.?Last week?was an introduction to applying the SOAR framework to a human-centered strategy that begins with Strengths.?The emphasis this week is on the Opportunities aspect of the framework.
A Quick Recap of the Basics of SOAR
SOAR (Strengths, Opportunities, Aspirations, and Results) focuses on institutional strengths.?SOAR is a strategic planning framework with the following:
The focus on strengths means that the SOAR conversations can:
SOAR uses a positive lens to understand the whole system by including all relevant stakeholders as internal and external voices of the organization.
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty." - Winston S. Churchill
A Different Approach to Opportunities
Churchill's quote fits the concept of SOAR well.?We began with a focus on strengths, reinforcing the positive perspective crucial to maximizing the ability of the team to realize an ideal future state of a human-centered organization.?Furthermore, the shift from SWOT to SOAR is that weaknesses and threats are not ignored but reframed as Opportunities.?A change in perspective that I have found leads to a deeper level of stakeholder engagement and buy-in. Using this shift in our conversations is simple in concept but a powerful one based on my experience in several settings and various industries.
Imagining the Opportunities
In the imagine phase, stakeholders collectively explore known opportunities, hoping to discover more through stakeholder dialogue.?This phase aims to have stakeholder input into opportunities to give consideration when developing short and long-term goals and creating the overall strategy. This phase also identifies the organization's shared value set, vision, and mission through opportunities for stakeholders to activate effective strategy formulation.?The following questions are examples of questions to guide the Opportunities conversation:
It is crucial to do extensive research to fully leverage our opportunities to understand our organizational challenges, industry sector, business in general, and society.?
Visualizing the Future
During this imagine phase, I encourage participants to close their eyes and visualize a work environment where they see the humanist commitments in action:
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My experience has been that participants limit themselves to what they currently know. An effective scan requires a comprehensive look at current and future forces, issues, and trends to flesh out opportunities fully.
Key Takeaway
Strategic planning work using the SOAR framework uses a strengths-based positive focus. However, the weaknesses and threats of the SWOT framework are not ignored but reframed as opportunities. Therefore, it is crucial to do extensive research to fully leverage our Opportunities to understand our organizational challenges, industry sector, business in general, and society.?
First Step
Authors Jackie Stavros and Cherri Torres share that "Conversation is a crucial part of everything we do" is the basis of the book?Conversations Worth Having: Using Appreciative Inquiry to Fuel Productive and Meaningful Engagement.?The nature of conversations should be appreciative, achieved by using an inquiry-based approach to generate information and statement-based affirmative interactions with the intent to add value.?The content of the book will guide how to reframe weaknesses and threats into Opportunities positively
My Gratitude
I thank Jackie Stavros and Cherri Torres for their work in helping us shape "conversations worth having." In a world where most employees state that their organization is a poor communicator, this duo has guided to shape the types of dialogue necessary to transform companies significantly.
Sneak Peek
Next week's blog will review sample questions we ask in the Aspirations phase of the SOAR framework essential to the transition to humanist manufacturing.??
This article was originally a blog post at Emmanuel Strategic Sustainability. To learn more about our work or read more blog posts, visit?emmanuelstratgicsustainability.com.
Additional Information
If you like what you have read, I invite you to connect with me on?LinkedIn.?
I invite you to listen to my guest appearance on the?Inside Personal Growth?podcast. I had the fantastic opportunity to discuss an overview of my book with podcast host Greg Voisen. While "manufacturing" is in the book title, the content is relevant to all industries.
I encourage you to read my book?Humanist Manufacturing: A Humanitarian Approach to Excellence in High-Impact Plant Operations.?The paperback and eBook versions will be available on January 10, 2023, on?Amazon?and at many other booksellers. You can also watch a video of my?Book Launch Event.
I invite you to join the?Humanist Manufacturing Group?on LinkedIn if you want to interact with others interested in the topic.
Please contact me if you need help with the manufacturing support services of consulting, coaching, Fractional Chief Sustainability Officer, or training/reskilling at 734-664-9076.
See my virtual TEDx Videos at?Reinventing the?Prison Industrial Complex?and?Humanist Manufacturing.