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Corporate Strategy and the Elephant in the Room
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| Guest post by: Joe Evans |
Article Overview: Recession weary executives have a new challenge to face. Times have changed and businesses must re-evaluate their pre-recession strategies. The elephant in the room is in full view, but organizational leaders do not like to talk about it or even think about it. Yes, the elephant in the room, that no one likes to address, is outdated strategy and the need for new and improved strategic thinking. Making change to the way we have operated in the past in difficult. A starting point for change is to correct the self-inflicted organizational dysfunction that occurs during strategy development.
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Corporate Strategy and the Elephant in the Room
What Holds Companies Back From Developing Great Strategies?
Recession
weary executives have a new challenge to face. Times have changed and
businesses must re-evaluate their pre-recession strategies. The
elephant in the room is in full view, but organizational leaders do not
like to talk about it or even think about it. Yes, the elephant in the
room, that no one likes to address, is outdated strategy and the need
for new and improved strategic thinking. Making change to the way we
have operated in the past in difficult. A starting point for change is
to correct the self-inflicted organizational dysfunction that occurs
during strategy development. Half-baked strategic decision making based
on wishful thinking and antiquated assumptions must stop now.
Corporate strategies will never be perfect or foolproof, but they can be
systematically improved through process changes and “testing”
strategies ahead of committing to them and gambling our reputations,
jobs and the very life of the business. To see our economic recovery
continue, we need to see smart strategies from our business leaders and
the brilliant teams of people working for them.
The truth is, that
bad decisions never go unpunished. Strategies that are based on
decisions and assumptions which don’t get reviewed thoroughly enough and
challenged enough to “harden” the overall premise are compromised from
the beginning. Strategic planning is a journey which spans a
long-range time horizon, not an annual project to be crossed off a
checklist. Strategy must be sound to begin with, so that it does not
zig-zag and change course often. Nonetheless, the strategy should be
stated, and spelled out in terms that it can be understood and acted
upon. The term “strategy” and “strategic planning” tend to get
co-mingled. Setting strategic goals around business performance is not a
substitute for strategy that determines corporate directions such as
markets to be entered or exited, products to be enhanced through
innovation programs and acquisitions that will solidify competitive
price advantage through supply-chain integration.
The Process Can Stifle Creativity
The
planning process itself can be to blame. It can shut-off creative
ideas and strategic thinking by forcing participants into the box of a
spreadsheet template that contains ambiguously stated financial goals
and growth targets. Where is the strategy behind the goals?
We
should never forget that the entire point of the strategic planning
process is to devise a plan of both offensive and defensive actions
intended to maintain and build an advantage over the competition through
strategic and organizational innovation. That is what strategy is all
about. First, we endeavor to understand as much as possible about our
own organization’s core values, culture, structure and core competencies
(the internal aspect of the business ecosystem). Our strategy
development process should facilitate drawing out and analyzing this
information to use to our benefit. Likewise, since businesses do not
operate in a vacuum, the external environment is equally as important to
understand and then to integrate into our strategic thinking.
Strategy
must be the product of a process that stimulates creative thinking and
identifies real opportunities; then defines action within the context of
the business plan. The same is true for identifying and planning for
threats to the business. They both fall into the category of strategic
priorities. Failing to identify the “true” strategic priorities and
devise strategy to address them in our long-range planning is folly for
the business’s long-term viability.
A strategy that neglects to
enrich customer value through intentional strategic actions, misses the
point. Such inwardly-focused strategies signal trouble down the line
for the business that commits this omission. As leaders in our
organizations, we must be aware of the core essence of goodness we
provide in our products and services, whom we serve as our customers and
what it is that we do better than our competitors. We should plan for
value creation and at a minimum, for strategic planning, to yield
competitive advantage, it must address value creation for the customers
of our business - current and future.
Basic questions like these
will steer our thinking outward to the customer so that we might
consider how we go about creating additional value for our customer base
and leverage that in our sales in marketing.
As
indicated earlier, a well-formed corporate strategy should be something
that can be articulated and understood. The underlying goals, metrics
and measurements commonly passed-off as strategy do not sufficiently lay
out the bumper-pads to keep organizational momentum aimed in the proper
direction. Yes, strategy is accomplished through unambiguously
expressed strategic goals (outcomes) and operational actions to achieve
those strategic organizational outcomes. Strategy is not the goals on
their own. Changes will occur in the environment in which the business
operates, but having a sound strategy helps the organization be
predictive instead of reactive.
Group Think
With the
confines of a spreadsheet as the beginnings of the strategy development,
it is no wonder that the people involved with corporate strategy
development sometimes shut-off their creative sides and only focus on
the analytical task in front of them. Most people will operate within
the box they are placed in and not bother to try tearing down those
walls.
So what else goes wrong during the act of planning
strategy, you may ask? What about the exclusion of potential “key
contributors” to the planning process? Where are the people that know
what is going on and how things really work? Too often, the executive
team, by default, locks out key people from the planning process that
might well have contributed beneficial ideas and information. This is
not done intentionally of course. It is done out of habit. “Let’s get
the executives and their managers into planning sessions and get this
done...”. Planning is treated as a task or a mini-project to complete,
overlooking the fact that it is instead a journey. Even the
prefabricated planning agenda (edited to refresh the date from the
previous year) contributes to the squashing of creativity. Such agendas
can inadvertently close off discussions that should be a part of a
healthy planning process and to do so is harmful to the organization.
Usually the planning approach is to blame.
Think Like Your Competitor
What
about our competition? All too often, corporate strategies are devised
without thinking in our competitor’s shoes. If they are smart
competitors and coming from behind us in terms of market share, their
eyes are on us already. What maneuvers will they make to overcome us
competitively? What proactive elements of our strategy can put
additional distance between us and them? Our strategy must consider our
vulnerabilities and account for them through counter-actions. If we
are exposed in one area of our business, then why? What must be done to
shore it up? It is distinctly possible that strategic analysis will
lead us to make decisions to exit one or more areas of our business in
order to better focus on more profitable or viable segments. In other
cases, strategic analysis may trigger innovation initiatives to support a
strategy of expansion - capitalizing on a dominant competitive
position.
Redefine Your Box
In the end, corporate strategy
can be regarded as a necessary risk that we must take. When companies
get it right, they thrive. When they swing and miss, fallout occurs and
sometimes business disasters follow.
Hope
is not a strategy and strategies are only as good as the assumptions
and data that they are based on. We must challenge the underlying
strategic assumptions as part of the planning process and avoid deluding
ourselves with “happy talk”. If the strategy isn’t tested through
critical evaluation, we put much at risk. Harness the available
creativity in your organizations and channel it through a process that
puts a laser beam focus on developing a multi-dimensional and holistic
strategy to fuel long-range planning. When it comes to strategy, don’t
just think outside the box, but instead...redefine your box.
In upcoming segments, we will look further into the art and science of strategy development.
Painting “Redefine Your Box” by Sue deCordova
* * *
For permission to use or reprint any portions of this
copyrighted article, contact Method Frameworks at articles@methodframeworks.com.
About the Author:
Joe Evans is the President and CEO of Method Frameworks. Joe is a published author, frequent speaker and recognized expert in
corporate strategic planning. To contact Method Frameworks about
scheduling Mr. Evans about an upcoming speaking engagement, visit www.methodframeworks.com/business-speaker or email requests to media_relations@methodframeworks.com.
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Article Tags: business strategy consulting, corporate strategy, management consulting, strategic planning consulting, strategy consulting, strategy development
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About the Author: Joe Evans RSS for Joe's articles - Visit Joe's website Joe Evans serves as the President and Chief Executive Officer of Method Frameworks. Method Frameworks provides management consulting services to commercial enterprises with strategic and operational planning solutions using the firm’s proprietary Plan4 process. Visit Method Frameworks at www.methodframeworks.com. Joe is a published author, frequent speaker and recognized expert in co rporate strategic planning. To contact Method Frameworks about scheduling Mr. Evans about an upcoming speaking engagement, visit www.methodframeworks.com/business-speaker or email requests to media_relations@methodframeworks.com. Want more corporate strategic planning insights? Read Joe's blog. Also, request to join the "Strategic Planning Xchange" now by following this link to the Strategic Planning Xchange. Click here to visit Joe's website Todays Definition of Strategic Planning Does This Business Strategy Make Me Look Fat A Fresh Approach to Obtaining Global Perspectives on Corporate Strategic Planning The Truth About Why So Many Strategic Plans Dont Get Executed Bringing Passion Back to Corporate Planning |
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