When many business owners and executives hear the words "Strategic Planning," their minds jump to another topic. Any other subject will do. In their hearts, they know that planning is important to the organization. But knowing where to start is the issue. They have heard the stories from their peers who created a plan, and it sat on the shelf for a year or forever. As a result, planning happened once and then stopped. It amounted to a waste of time and money. The question then becomes: why bother planning at all?
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Businesses that do not do long-term planning should think about the old Lewis Carroll quotation, "If you don't know where you are going, any road will get you there." If you substitute the word "decision" for "road," the phrase becomes, "If you (the business) don't know where you are going, any decision will get you there."
Organizations make choices every day that appear to be "just doing business" when in fact, they are creating a future direction. For example, continuing a long-term contract with a customer for a low-margin product or service affects the future. There was a best-selling business book from years ago called The Fifth Discipline, written by Peter Senge. Although it was full of innovative ideas and messages, the one that stuck with me is that issues a business faces today are the result of decisions that were not made in this timeframe and under current conditions but years ago. Let's encourage organizations to do something different; "If you started fresh today with a clean slate, what would be different in your business, and how could you maximize return on your efforts?"
What can owners and leaders do about resetting their expectations around long-term planning? How can senior leaders develop a strategy that does not end up "sitting on the shelf?" Can we reframe how we think about the future? Is it possible to change a painful planning process into an exciting portrait of hope?
Like other significant problems met by an organization, the solution often lies in a repeatable system or process. The best method looks at what needs to happen now, a few years out, and the longer-term (e.g., 10 + years). It also gets broad input from as many experts and engaged members of the organization as possible to receive insight from the "wisdom of the crowd." It considers the purpose and core values of the organization, the financial needs of the stakeholders, the influence of market conditions, and the long-term needs for members of the "crowd" (employees).
Daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly execution keeps it "off the shelf" and is a crucial element of how the business works. Returning to the plan repeatedly to gauge "where we planned to be, where we are, and where we need to go" makes the conversation relevant and maximizes expert wisdom.
A Shared Journey
The Great Game of Business calls this process High-Involvement PlanningTM or HIP for short. HIP offers businesses an alternate, motivating, and exciting course that answers the question, "Where could you be in the future with expert insight, maximum effort, efficient cooperation, and careful planning?" Having used planning processes as an executive and business owner along with doing strategic planning consulting for over a decade, here are the things that stand out to me about HIP:
You can find more details here - https://www.greatgame.com/blog/ten-steps-to-strategic-planning-success
My challenge to you is to rethink the phrase Strategic Planning. Maybe, with the context of HIP in mind, you might even find these words to be far less intimidating now!
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