This is the beginning of the season when companies that are on a calendar year begin their strategic and long-term planning. Ventana Research performed an extensive investigation in this area with our long-range planning benchmark research. Strategic and long-range planning is a process and discipline that companies use to determine the best strategy for succeeding in the markets they serve and then ensure they have the capabilities and resources needed to support their strategic objectives.
I use the term “strategic planning” to mean the formal conceptualization of strategy, which is more qualitative than quantitative. Typically, it involves a relatively small number of people on the senior leadership team. Long-range planning, on the other hand, is the formal quantification of the strategic plan, which translates ideas into numbers. This process involves fewer and more senior people than the annual budget, and it is designed to serve as a bridge that connects an organization’s strategic conceptualization with its operational planning and financial budgeting.
Our research shows that nearly two-thirds (64%) of participants – all
There are complex reasons for the disconnect between corporate strategizing and day-to-day execution. A clear statement of strategic objectives is necessary, of course, but translating it into objectives for business units and individuals is another matter.
Another aspect of knowing how to manage to the company strategy is understanding how the objectives and actions of one part of the business affect the others. Since most companies do not operate in a rigid command-and-control environment, it is important for managers in one area of the business to be able to anticipate how a change in their part of the company will affect others. An important objective in any corporation is to ensure that strategy and objectives are aligned across departments and business units. Yet only one-fourth of our participants said they have a clear understanding of the specific goals of other parts of the business, such as sales quotas, production targets and profitability, and how these affect their own area. This helps explain other findings described above, such as why so few companies react to changes in their overall business in a well-coordinated fashion – and why it is so common for the left hand not to know what the right is doing.
Since in business the only constant is change, it’s crucial for companies to ensure that they maintain strategic alignment when managing change. Unfortunately, few do. Only 14 percent said that when market or economic conditions change, their company’s response is well coordinated. While six in 10 said their response is somewhat coordinated, I think “somewhat” is an unacceptable standard because it results in diminished performance. After all, a “somewhat coordinated” juggler drops a lot of balls. Improving coordination is an area in which better communication across the company and a clearer view of operations are likely to improve performance in a sustainable fashion. Issues of coordination generally arise from a lack of communication or information availability, both of which reflect what information a company gathers and how it makes it accessible. When the problem is an inability to coordinate actions, the underlying issue usually is an inability to share information easily. Here again, having the means to bring together information from multiple data sources can make it feasible to increase the visibility of actions and status across functional silos.
Improving the connection between strategy and execution starts with a relatively simple conversation between the CEO on the one hand and executives and managers on the other. If asking “What is our strategy?” elicits answers that are inconsistent or rambling (or just blank stares), there’s a strategy communication issue. If the answer to the follow-on question “Can you measure how well you are performing to the company’s strategic objectives?” is no or “sort of,” then the company has a performance measurement or data availability issue or both. Addressing these gaps can go a long way toward diminishing disconnects between strategy and execution. Even if your company does an excellent or very good job of connecting strategy and execution, there is still likely to be room for improvement, especially in terms of providing executives and managers with a more complete view of what’s happening outside of the company, including market trend information and competitive intelligence. Despite a massive, two-decades-long investment in making business data of all types widely available, a majority of companies have yet to fully break free of process and management behavior constraints that are artifacts of a bygone, information-poor era. At the start of the strategic and long-range planning season, it’s time to think about translating all of the thoughtfulness and hard work into better execution.
Regards,
Robert Kugel – SVP Research