Let’s face it: when it comes to our personal life, we do a lot of planning. We make vacation plans, plans for dinner, plans to catch up with friends, plans for which show to watch next, and plans for the holidays. But what about a plan for your business?

Responses to the top 5 complaints about planning:

  1. Takes too long—not as long as filing for bankruptcy.
  2. I don’t need to write it down, it’s in my head—unless you’re a company of one or your colleagues are mind readers, it needs to be written down.
  3. Things change so fast that plans are immediately outdated—I’ll let Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates take this one: “We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next ten.”
  4. We don’t need a plan because we’re “opportunistic”—”opportunistic” is usually code for “flavor-of-the-month” strategy and you’re not Baskin Robbins or Dunkin—did someone say pumpkin doughnuts?!
  5. Plans are too long and nobody looks at them—also true for several Quentin Tarantino movies but if you can crystallize your business strategy into a 1-2 page plan, it’s a game changer for communication and execution (same for Kill Bill Volumes I and II).

Strategic Planning

A survey by the consulting firm PwC of more than 6,000 corporate executives found that only 37% of leaders say their company has a well-defined strategy or plan for the future. In other words, more than half of leaders don’t believe they have a real plan that summarizes how they will win in their markets and provide superior value to customers. Dan Helfrich, CEO of Deloitte, says, “You need to care about it [setting strategy]. Resisting the tyranny of the present, and the gravitational force to spend all your time on internal-efficiency and operations topics at the expense of medium- to long-term strategy and culture—that’s what separates those who are great at strategy and those who aren’t.”

Over the past two decades as I’ve facilitated the strategic thinking and planning process for executive leadership teams from companies ranging from startups to $30 billion multinationals, I’ve discovered three key planning principles:

1. A plan is only as good as the thinking that goes into it.

The main reason that planning is no more than a check-the-box exercise at some companies is because there’s no new insights to spark and fuel it. The strategy development process needs to start with strategic thinking sessions that stimulate new insights, propose contrarian approaches, and shake-up the status quo. If you start the strategy process by pulling out last year’s budget, you may as well put a fork in it because it’s as done as a Maxwell Steet polish with grilled onions and spicy mustard (it’s a Chicago thing).

If we consider a funnel, strategic thinking is the large opening at the top where key questions and tools stimulate robust, open-ended conversation about the key business issues. Now we get to the neck of the funnel where strategic planning takes place and we begin discussing which insights to act on and they get channeled into the spout of the funnel which is the resulting plan. Failure to start at the top of the funnel with productive strategic thinking sessions will result in Albert Einstein’s description of insanity: doing the same things over and over again and expecting different results.

2. A plan transforms chaos into clarity.

My esteemed high school physics teacher Mr. Warner shared this principle with us: “Ordered systems lose less energy than chaotic systems.” While your people may get an adrenaline rush every time there’s a fire drill or someone calls a meeting to chase the newest, shiniest object, after a while, the hectic randomness burns people out. Research shows that people are 40 percent more committed to following a leader and the strategy they develop if they believe the leader is strategic and knows how to set clear direction.

The added qualitative benefit I’ve noticed in groups with a clear plan is confidence. Confidence in what they’re doing and why they’re doing it, which feeds their confidence in believing that they are truly serving the real needs of their customers more effectively than the competition. Are you confident that your business has a winning strategy?

3. A plan unites and inspires.

Can you recall the last time you were lost? With GPS on our phones these days, it doesn’t happen much. But, if you’ve ever been out for a hike and missed a trail sign or lost track of your young child at a store, it can range from frustrating to terrifying. In an age where no business is guaranteed a future, employees want some reassurance and hope from leadership that they know where the company is going and how it’s going to get there. A plan that has input from all relevant team members at different levels and is discussed and reviewed throughout the year creates alignment and engagement.

A plan should not be etched in stone. It’s more like a garden that needs to be tended to, looked at, and fed with new insights on a regular basis. And that begins with each individual. David Novak, cofounder and former CEO of YUM! Brands, shares the approach he took to planning: “For years I had an embroidered pillow in my bedroom that just said, “PLAN.” It was a reminder to take time every night to prepare for the following day—to review my meetings, read analyst reports, check in on major projects, and more. I wanted to walk into every day ready to listen, learn, and contribute.”

I developed a brief plan assessment to help teams gauge where they currently are in their planning efforts. Here are the first five of twenty questions—respond to each statement with a “Yes” or “No”:

  1. The plan is updated with new insights throughout the year to remain relevant.
  2. The plan clearly identifies a limited number of priorities, so we have extreme focus and are not spreading our resources too thin.
  3. The plan drives my daily activities.
  4. The plan is a concise summary of the factors that will make or break the business.
  5. The plan includes insights in all four key areas: market, customers, competitors and company.

A plan signifies to yourself and others that you know what you’re doing. Not having a plan, or not having a plan that’s relevant and useful, is a sign that we don’t know what we’re doing. If you “Think—Plan—Act”, you’ll be light years ahead of all those people who do none of these; they simply react.

Take the one-minute plan quiz here and see how you and your team score: https://www.strategyskills.com/plan-assessment/


Strategic Minds Podcast

Are you tactical or strategic? Research shows that it’s the difference between bankruptcy and a Kevlar competitive advantage. In a world where bad strategy is the leading cause of business failure, and only one out of every four leaders use strategic thinking, strategic fitness is the meta-skill of elite executives.

On Strategic Minds, you’ll journey with New York Times & Wall Street Journal bestselling author Rich Horwath into conversations with extraordinary leaders and world-class experts to learn new ways to think, plan, and act strategically. You’ll discover game-changing insights, tips, and techniques to turbocharge your performance and position you as a true difference maker in your arena.

Following the deep dive guest interview, stay tuned for three valuable segments: “Practice Makes Profit” where Rich shares tools and techniques to practice becoming more strategic; “League of Strategic Minds”: Rich answers questions submitted by listeners; and “Winsights”: Rich closes with a quote and question to apply to your business.

Subscribe to the Strategic Minds podcast page on YouTube or submit your question for the League of Strategic Minds segment.

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