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Answer Upon - Strategic Planning-Start with the End
Sales: I Don't Know What To Do-Guess I'll Call Steve one to adopt the plan as their own.I knew the first time I met him that he was just out to get my business. After all he was a salesman. That's what his card said, that's what his job was, and that's what he did for a living.I don't trust salesmen, and I bet a lot of the people who read this don't either.It's not surprising, I guess. There are a lot of salespeople in the world who will do or say almost anything to get a sale, and a lot of times the things they say are lies or half truths, and the things they do are deceptive and deceiving. Just like a lot of other things in life, it only takes getting burned a couple of times to make you distrust all of their ilk. (C'mon, who uses "ilk" anymore?)I was a federal purchasing agent, so it was MY j A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows: Cluttered Advertising Does Not Work The objective of strategic planning is many times confused with that of a business plan. Whereas the strategic plan may be a part of a complete business plan, the timeframe and purpose is different and distinct. A strategic plan constructs a concept of the future of an industry or business and provides a roadmap to successfully guide the company to a set of goals in a defined point in time in that future.If you use print advertising as part of your marketing mix and your ads are cluttered they generally will not pull like clean and crisp advertising does with simple messages. As a young man I sold advertising for a very popular Aviation Magazine Called the Pacific Flyer and the Editor and Publisher Wayman Dunlop use to always tell me to keep my clients from cluttering their advertising.Eventually I realized if I allowed my customers to clutter their ads too much they would not pull the proper results and there would be fewer repeat customers. He was right then and that same principle is very true today.Do not clutter you ads. You see, today even more so, because people are busy and only scan the advertising, you only ha Normally, the decision to develop a new strategic plan is triggered because some area of the business is not achieving the results the ownership has hoped or something new and unexpected has changed in the marketplace. Traditionally, the approach for developing a strategic plan was to define the market size, customers profile and competitors’ strengths and weaknesses. Then, the preparer would review the company’s past financial performance, determine its key customers’ characteristics, calculate its market share and access how the company stacked up against its existing known competition. Using the past rate of growth to project the future, some optimistic, usually unrealistic, goals were established without a clear method of measuring whether they were ever obtained. The process usually involved only a small group of top executives and resulted in a document that quickly became obsolete. Because it was designed to meet yesterday’s needs, this type of strategic plan was eventually placed on the book shelf beside all the others that preceded it. Strategic planning in today’s rapidly changing environment must not be constrained and limited by the past definitions of the industry, market, products/services, customers or competition. To be successful and usable as a functioning guide to the future, the strategic plan must be adaptable, sustainable and comprehensive. The entire organization must accept it intellectually and emotionally. In other words, the strategic plan becomes the essence of the vision and direction of the company to the ownership, the employees and the public. This is accomplished by "starting with the end". Beginning with an open mind and a blank sheet of paper, what is possible in the next three to five years? Dare to challenge some basic assumptions and break down the walls you constructed around your vision of your business! What will be your customers’ wants and expectations? What new uses will exist for your products and services? What new markets and opportunities will be possible in the future? Will new competition come from other companies like yours or alternative product and service providers? Are there operational cost reductions or productivity developments on the drawing board? What industry trends could be adjusted because of governmental oversight and regulations? Will there be shortages or new materials that will change your supply chain practices? How many of these possible changes can you influence and manage? What contingencies should you include in your planning process for those you cannot control? Once a clear and concise vision of the future of three to five years out is defined and supported by the planning group, ownership and top management should set of goals for the company (revenues, net profit, gross margin, return on investment, etc.) as a whole and each major functional area (sales, operations, financial, human resources, R&D, etc.). Quantitative measures of success must be established for each goal both for the end of the planning period and for various milestones along the way. Each total company goal should be analyzed as to what changes and actions will be required in the present operation of each major functional area in order to achieve success within the timeframe of the planning period. Viewing where each functional area is currently positioned from the point of where it needs to be in the future will form an outline of what has to be accomplished along the way. It must also be recognized that these changes and actions will not necessary result in linear improvements and may impact the short term performance of that group as well as other functional areas. For example, a planned implementation of new personnel software system may affect hiring procedures in human resources, payroll processing in accounting and employee communications in operations. It is important to involve the entire organization in the tactical portion of the planning process that identifies the methods and courses of actions required to achieve the short term or milestone goals. This ensures that important details and considerations have not been overlooked and provides the vehicle for everyone to adopt the plan as their own. A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows: Build New Habits -- Payday Will Come -- whether they were ever obtained. The process usually involved only a small group of top executives and resulted in a document that quickly became obsolete. Because it was designed to meet yesterday’s needs, this type of strategic plan was eventually placed on the book shelf beside all the others that preceded it.Feeling that it never works is not a good excuse. You may even remember last year not getting past February. GOOD intentions. NO success. Don’t quit! Every year has a new beginning for each of us. Keep on working at it.NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONSYou knew that was coming. Wipe the slate clean for 2004. Most of us had a few UPS and some had more DOWNS. There is real power in your mind. Think positives even when it is most difficult. Negatives are destroyers that pull us down into the abyss.Actually, you can make resolutions EVERY day. Hop out of bed with a great attitude. Begin by saying, “Good morning, God, what are you and I going to do today?” It may surprise you. Negative folk say, “Good God, it’s morn Strategic planning in today’s rapidly changing environment must not be constrained and limited by the past definitions of the industry, market, products/services, customers or competition. To be successful and usable as a functioning guide to the future, the strategic plan must be adaptable, sustainable and comprehensive. The entire organization must accept it intellectually and emotionally. In other words, the strategic plan becomes the essence of the vision and direction of the company to the ownership, the employees and the public. This is accomplished by "starting with the end". Beginning with an open mind and a blank sheet of paper, what is possible in the next three to five years? Dare to challenge some basic assumptions and break down the walls you constructed around your vision of your business! What will be your customers’ wants and expectations? What new uses will exist for your products and services? What new markets and opportunities will be possible in the future? Will new competition come from other companies like yours or alternative product and service providers? Are there operational cost reductions or productivity developments on the drawing board? What industry trends could be adjusted because of governmental oversight and regulations? Will there be shortages or new materials that will change your supply chain practices? How many of these possible changes can you influence and manage? What contingencies should you include in your planning process for those you cannot control? Once a clear and concise vision of the future of three to five years out is defined and supported by the planning group, ownership and top management should set of goals for the company (revenues, net profit, gross margin, return on investment, etc.) as a whole and each major functional area (sales, operations, financial, human resources, R&D, etc.). Quantitative measures of success must be established for each goal both for the end of the planning period and for various milestones along the way. Each total company goal should be analyzed as to what changes and actions will be required in the present operation of each major functional area in order to achieve success within the timeframe of the planning period. Viewing where each functional area is currently positioned from the point of where it needs to be in the future will form an outline of what has to be accomplished along the way. It must also be recognized that these changes and actions will not necessary result in linear improvements and may impact the short term performance of that group as well as other functional areas. For example, a planned implementation of new personnel software system may affect hiring procedures in human resources, payroll processing in accounting and employee communications in operations. It is important to involve the entire organization in the tactical portion of the planning process that identifies the methods and courses of actions required to achieve the short term or milestone goals. This ensures that important details and considerations have not been overlooked and provides the vehicle for everyone to adopt the plan as their own. A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows: This Forced Prospective Clients To Call Me r customers’ wants and expectations? What new uses will exist for your products and services? What new markets and opportunities will be possible in the future? Will new competition come from other companies like yours or alternative product and service providers? Are there operational cost reductions or productivity developments on the drawing board? What industry trends could be adjusted because of governmental oversight and regulations? Will there be shortages or new materials that will change your supply chain practices? How many of these possible changes can you influence and manage? What contingencies should you include in your planning process for those you cannot control?Special offers abound in every sphere of merchandising and marketing, but how many of them work? Before I decided to make any special offers I gave the matter a great deal of thought.When is an offer a special offer and when is it just a discount or a freebie of some sort? It seemed to me that to make anything special it has to be specific and personal.Look at it this way. Imagine it’s Christmas Day and you and your extended family are sitting around opening presents. See the expressions on the faces of the women present if every woman in the room finds, when she opens her parcel, that she has exactly the same blouse as all the other women! Would that feel special or ever so slightly deflating?It must be the same Once a clear and concise vision of the future of three to five years out is defined and supported by the planning group, ownership and top management should set of goals for the company (revenues, net profit, gross margin, return on investment, etc.) as a whole and each major functional area (sales, operations, financial, human resources, R&D, etc.). Quantitative measures of success must be established for each goal both for the end of the planning period and for various milestones along the way. Each total company goal should be analyzed as to what changes and actions will be required in the present operation of each major functional area in order to achieve success within the timeframe of the planning period. Viewing where each functional area is currently positioned from the point of where it needs to be in the future will form an outline of what has to be accomplished along the way. It must also be recognized that these changes and actions will not necessary result in linear improvements and may impact the short term performance of that group as well as other functional areas. For example, a planned implementation of new personnel software system may affect hiring procedures in human resources, payroll processing in accounting and employee communications in operations. It is important to involve the entire organization in the tactical portion of the planning process that identifies the methods and courses of actions required to achieve the short term or milestone goals. This ensures that important details and considerations have not been overlooked and provides the vehicle for everyone to adopt the plan as their own. A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows: Proper Care and Feeding of the Business Owner for various milestones along the way.That sizzling sound you’re hearing may be a symptom of a major hidden cause of businesses closing their doors. It’s called burnout. And you may be its next victim. Often the last thing a business owner considers is his or her health and sanity. The burnout that results from overwork and stress can deliver a death blow to the very enterprise you’ve been giving your all to create. Setting a course for your business that includes the proper care and feeding of the business owner is a critical success factor in every business.Burnout occurs after prolonged periods of stress and physical and/or mental fatigue. It leaves business owners feeling hopeless, powerless, cynical, and resentful. It creates an atmosphere of failure, stagnat Each total company goal should be analyzed as to what changes and actions will be required in the present operation of each major functional area in order to achieve success within the timeframe of the planning period. Viewing where each functional area is currently positioned from the point of where it needs to be in the future will form an outline of what has to be accomplished along the way. It must also be recognized that these changes and actions will not necessary result in linear improvements and may impact the short term performance of that group as well as other functional areas. For example, a planned implementation of new personnel software system may affect hiring procedures in human resources, payroll processing in accounting and employee communications in operations. It is important to involve the entire organization in the tactical portion of the planning process that identifies the methods and courses of actions required to achieve the short term or milestone goals. This ensures that important details and considerations have not been overlooked and provides the vehicle for everyone to adopt the plan as their own. A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows: Salvadore Dali Knew About Branding one to adopt the plan as their own.Dal? was born in Spain in 1904, and he was always outlandish and controversial. His name became an icon, and his works are unique and recognizable. Dali’s excellent job of branding himself resulted in his creating a brand like “Coca-Cola,” perennial brand. He is one of the only artists who became famous in his lifetime. As you know, many artists never receive recognition until after their death. We all wish our brands would be this well known.Dali “surrealist,” style was part of his brilliant branding. His eccentricities, poetic qualities, political disobedience, wide moustache, and unique style all made his name and his work recognizable and memorable. Not only was he an artist, he tried many different things, and he fa A word of caution, short-cutting the complete top to bottom planning process can increase the chance of failure by more than 50% and possibly place the company half-way to nowhere. To summarize, the keys to successful strategic planning are as follows:
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