Overview of the Strategic Planning Process - YouTube

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Hi, my name's Erica Olsen.
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Today's whiteboard video is an overview of the strategic planning process.
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Instead of going through a bullet-pointed list, we'll do it in the form of an illustration.
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To orient ourselves, I want to outline the four phases of the process over here: Assess,
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Design, Build and Manage.
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The phases of planning are assess, designing and building, and we spend a couple of months
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per year doing that.
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We spend the rest of the year managing the performance and the execution of our plan.
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Oftentimes, we get into execution and we're not exactly realizing the results that we
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want, in which case we go back in into some parts of the planning process, sort of rinse
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and repeat.
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Today's video is going through the whole process, but sometimes you just may pick pieces of
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it.
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So let's jump in.
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Great strategic plans start with understanding where we are today, assessing the current
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state.
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Point A. We do that by gathering external perspective, opportunities and threats.
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And internal perspective, strengths and weaknesses.
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And we summarize all that information into a SWOT analysis.
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And as a little asterisk, we have detailed whiteboard videos on each point today, so
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if you need to dig deeper, check those out.
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So once we're clear about where we are today, we can move into the second part of our process,
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which is designing the strategy, starting with our mission statement.
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Our mission statement is a square here because great mission statements tell us what's in
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and what's out.
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Why do we exist as an organization?
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What's our core purpose?
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And then by default, what's not?
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With clarity on our mission, we can move to casting our vision or our future state.
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Strategic plans are all about moving organizations from where we are today to where we want to
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be in the future and that's what our vision statement does for us.
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It tells us where we want to go.
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The rest of our plan builds a road map from today to tomorrow, starting with a couple
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of things that help us answer, how will we succeed?
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Our competitive advantages and our long-term organization-wide strategies.
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These come in different names, but let's just use the analogy and the visual to keep us
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grounded.
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These help guide, they act as an umbrella over our entire plan to make sure that we're
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building a plan that we can succeed and be successful and be competitive with.
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So with that guideline in place, we can move to building our framework.
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Our long-term strategic objectives are our framework.
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Again, there are different names for this.
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Let's just use that for today.
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I like to see them in four categories because we want a holistic framework.
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We want to make sure that our plan covers our financial perspective, our customer perspective,
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our operational and internal perspective, and our people perspective.
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Less than six is a pretty good idea when you're looking at your framework because we're gonna
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cascade the rest of the plan from these.
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From there, we're ready to move into the next phase, which is building our plan.
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That looks like starting with our goals, our corporate goals.
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And we're using the word "goals" to articulate quantifiable, outcome-based statements.
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Where do you want to be in year one?
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In year two?
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In year three?
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And most of the time, we use key performance indicators to help guide us along the way.
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So we like our corporate goals...and again we're gonna cascade from our strategic objectives...we
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like our corporate goals to be SMART.
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SMART's a great acronym to make sure you have good, quantifiable, outcome-based goals: Specific,
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Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Time-Bound.
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Once we have our corporate goals in place, a couple per each long-term strategic objective,
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we're ready to move into annual operating plans and that looks like building goals and
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cascading into each level of the organization.
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So that looks like corporate goals being cascaded into department goals and department goals
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being cascaded into individual contributor goals.
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Once we've cascaded it down that far, we have a plan and we're done with the third phase.
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So now we have a plan, now what?
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We want to move into managing execution because nobody wants to build a plan that sits on
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a shelf.
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So there are three things you have to have in place to effectively execute.
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Number one, people.
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You need to make sure that every person in your organization has an individual action
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plan that expresses ownership and accountability for what they need to get done by when.
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And with that, that matters because all the rest of this, it's just on paper if we're
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not clear about that, that very specific piece.
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The second thing is we need to make sure that we have a system in place to track and manage
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performance.
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A software system, spreadsheets, whatever it looks like, you're gonna gather a lot of
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data on a monthly or a quarterly, an annual basis, you need a place to put that and everybody
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needs to be working on the same system.
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The third thing is process.
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You need to schedule at least monthly or quarterly reviews of your performance because without
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that review, all the rest of this is just again good ideas on paper.
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So with that, that's an overview of the strategic planning process.
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Subscribe to our channel.
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Happy strategizing.