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Archive for November, 2006

Strengthen Your Mission and Vision for Profitability

Wednesday, November 22nd, 2006

How a Clear Vision and Mission Leads to More Profits

Dan Bobinski http://www.management-issues.com/display_page.asp?section=opinion&id=2837

Here’s an experiment you can try: Walk into a company’s office and find its mission statement hanging on a wall. Take note of its meanings, and then speak to any five people you meet from that company. Ask them if they know their company’s mission.

Chances are you’ll hear either five different responses, or the ever-popular, “I don’t know.” Some people may even laugh at you.

It’s no small wonder the majority of employees scoff at mission statements. Usually what we see is fluff – overly vague generalizations that could apply to almost any company, and often they’re paragraphs long; too long to be recalled by anyone, and therefore, largely useless.

The problem is made worse when vision and mission statements are intermixed, further clouding their practicality.

At the core of this all-too-common problem is a simple lack of understanding. Ask those same five people you talked to earlier to define “vision” and “mission” and you’re likely to get an equally wide range of responses.

So, with the intention of making life more simple and companies more profitable, I offer an easy-to-remember way to create clearly understood – and useful – vision and mission statements.

Here are some definitions (and differences), in very simple terms:

Vision Statement: Where you “see” yourself being; where you want to go

Mission Statement: What you do to get there

In a more practical example:

Vision: Widget Manufacturing will be known worldwide as the highest quality widget producer.

Mission: Widget Manufacturing strives to:

  • research and integrate the latest, most reliable widget technology,
  • use the most reliable widget manufacturing processes, and
  • provide unparalleled customer service to every widget customer.

Note that the vision is not what they do, but where they want to be. The mission statement outlines what Widget Manufacturing will do. The differences are clear, and quite simple.

Most of the time a company keeps its vision statement to itself, since where a company sees itself being is nobody else’s business. Besides, if the competition knew where you wanted to be, they could easily create a strategy that gets in your way. The purpose of a vision statement is to guide top leadership when making strategic decisions.

A mission statement clarifies what your company does. You want people to know what you do – both internally and externally. Internally, it keeps employees focused and it forms a basis for making tactical decisions. In other words, if two options for action are on the table, looking at them in light of the mission statement often helps in choosing a course of action that moves a company in the direction of its vision.

Externally, publishing your mission statement tells your clients what they can expect from you. Just knowing that provides them a sense of stability and security, and they’ll be more comfortable doing business with you.

Does a company need a vision and mission statement to function? Obviously not. The mere fact that so many companies survive without them answers that question. So what’s the benefit of having them?

Again, the answer is focus, flow, and a foundation for decisions. In other words, thriving instead of surviving. Aligning our efforts with an agreed-upon focus saves both time and frustration, and it makes a company much more profitable.

For example, much strife exists in companies due to no shared focus. When a company lacks a vision to which all subscribe, individual visions and missions tend to rise up and compete with each other. The result is conflict, delays, and lost revenues, all because of unnecessary turf wars consuming time and energy.

Creating a clear corporate vision minimizes big pet projects and helps point everyone in the same direction.

Your mission statement should be posted on a company website, on published literature, and throughout a company’s brick and mortar structures so people can see it, be reminded of it, and use it as a guideline for operations.

Everyone from the top on down should be able to recite it from memory, and recite it often. If top management eats, drinks, and breathes the mission statement, everyone else will, too. If top management ignores it, so will everyone else.

Ideally, mission statements should not be more than one sentence long. A couple of bullet points (such as in the example given) are fine, but multiple paragraphs are not practical for keeping people focused, and are therefore ineffective. If you find your mission covers a lot of ground, find a way to boil it down; it can be done if you take the time.

Bottom line, vision and mission statements create clarity and form a basis for making both strategic and tactical decisions – all of which help a company thrive instead of survive.

If thriving profitability is what you seek and your company vision and mission are unclear or non-existent, investing time to clarify these statements will help.

This article comes from www.management-issues.com

Leading Successful, Sustainable Change

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Blog post by Skip Reardon http://sixdisciplines.blogspot.com/2006/10/leading-successful-sustainable-change.html

Many change efforts within organizations are declared failures and abandoned before they are given a chance to succeed.

Most major change initiatives fall far short of the goals and expectations set for them. Here are seven steps that make the critical difference to make change succeed and last.

1. Create a sense of urgency. For an organization to change, it needs to have something like a heart attack-a wide-spread sense that if we don’t change our ways, and soon, we may die. This pain and fear is behind almost every major change initiative. You don’t go through the expense and hassle for the fun of it. You do it because you believe you have to.

2. Build a strong guiding coalition. Most change initiatives flounder or fail because of problems in the management team, even when there is no evidence of discord. Everyone sits around the conference table nodding their heads in agreement when the change initiative is proposed and discussed.

3. Develop a clear vision. What will success look like? What’s the plan for getting there? How will this plan overcome the pain of not changing? Articulate the vision in a few forceful and memorable words.

4. Ask different questions. If you want a different response-a different set of behaviors-then you should ask different questions that are aligned with the new strategy. If you create a sense of urgency around your plan, anticipate and fix problems in the leadership team, develop a clear vision of the end state you want, and encourage behavior change by asking different questions, you will have a strong foundation for change.

5. Work the plan. Get the leadership group into strong alignment, develop and communicate the vision, and stress the need for urgent action first. When people know why the change, they can figure out what needs to change and how to change it.

6. Design in a short-term win. Major change initiatives take time. The disruption, the learning curve, the initial clumsiness-all of these take a human toll. Look for the things that are going right, publicize and celebrate them. Early wins are critical to creating a climate where people will keep motivated.

7. Embed the change in the culture. New behaviors take time to become habitual. Spaced repetition is the best way to embed new ways, and means, and attitudes. If you skip this simple follow-up, all the expensive, painful, disruptive process of changing is wasted. Over time, people revert back to the old, familiar ways, and one more change initiative fails and is forgotten. Spaced repetition is a highly effective way to make change last and to make the idea of change a permanent characteristic of the culture.

The Makings of a Winning Team

Friday, November 10th, 2006

Do you running a business or manage a department that exemplifies the traits of a winning team? Below is a list of strategic tools and traits that you can evaluate your team against.

A WINNING TEAM…
  • Works to serve and keep customers happy
  • Gives more than is expected
  • Remains flexible and adapts to change
  • Respects its members
  • Continually fine tunes a quality environment
  • Believes in communication and listening
  • Accepts learning as an ongoing process
  • Helps each other to grow and succeed
  • Is proud of what they do, who they are, and the company they represent
  • Is open to new ways of doing things
  • Is enthusiastic, optimistic, and persistent
  • Celebrates success
Missing some of these traits? Why not build some of these traits and actions into your organization in 2007? Take some specific action in your strategic plan to develop a winning team.

Do you have some traits to add? Let’s hear them!

Looking Back On 2006

Thursday, November 9th, 2006

With a New Year quickly approaching it’s time to review your organization’s progress for the 2006 year. What goals did you set for the past year and how have you progressed towards those goals? The following blog post by Julie Poland takes a look back on 2006 and forward to planning for 2007.

2006 Goal Progress Check by Julie Poland http://worldaccordingtojulie.blogspot.com/2006/11/2006-goal-progress-check.html

It’s November now, and high time to take a look at your progress relative to your goals for 2006. How are you doing? On a scale of 1-10, how satisfied are you with your results? Have you taken the action that you committed to do? Have you discovered unexpected obstacles or delays in the results that you expected?

Yes, the holidays are coming. I often hear that as a reason why things start to slow down or activity shuts down entirely once November rolls around. “Nobody wants to talk about new initiatives right now,” or “Everyone is taking the weeks of vacation they didn’t have time to take earlier in the year.” Or, if you live in an outdoorsy spot like my area of Pennsylvania, “It’s buck/doe/turkey/small game/flying squirrel/one-eyed blue coyote season.”

If you choose to do so you have the opportunity to sprint for a few weeks to end your 2006 on an up note and set the stage for an outstanding first quarter of 2007. There ARE prospective clients out there who want to do the same thing, and you can help them. It might even be to their advantage from a tax perspective to work with you (translation: pay for your services) before their next accounting year begins.

How will 2007 be different from 2006 in terms of your performance? What will you do differently? Will the appearance of your business change? Will you continue to pursue your same line of strategic action? Have you updated your strategic plan, or developed a formalized plan of action for the first time? How do you intend to attain and sustain the laser focus that will catapult you to the next level of success? Even if you’re satisfied or downright thrilled with this year’s results, what do you want to do to sharpen the saw to prepare yourself for achieving even better results?

Success isn’t necessarily a struggle unless you make it so. If you do the same things you’ve always done you’ll get the same things you’ve always gotten. If you’ve pushed and pushed to no avail, read the sign on the door. It just might say “Pull.” Take a look at your history in the bright light of day and see how your assumptions and habits might have been holding you back until now. Then change something. There’s no time like the present – actually, there’s no time BUT the present.

‘Tis The Season…For Strategic Planning!

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006
Planning season is in full swing! Here is a great article to help you get started: Plan, or die: Yearly business planning is vital organization tool by Rhonda Abrams

Fall is a perfect time to take stock of your direction, set goals, and milestones for the coming year. That’s the time when we have traditionally developed an annual plan in my company.

But this year, during the summer, we conducted a thorough marketing plan session, so we put off the business plan process. Whoops!

Without a plan, I feel overwhelmed all the time. We have a number of decisions to make, and the lack of a clear strategic plan for the coming year is starting to make a noticeable difference. We’re experimenting with some new projects, have a real need to hire additional help, and are launching a number of new marketing initiatives.

With all this activity, I don’t know where to spend my time or money first. Every day, I consider a different option.

That’s why a plan is so important. One of the great things about planning is that it is a decision-making process. You set aside a time to discuss and evaluate exactly which projects and initiatives are priorities and which are not. It’s liberating.

Here’s a secret: business planning substantially frees you from the feeling of being constantly overwhelmed.

When I mentioned to my staff that it was time for a planning session, they all said they’d been feeling the exact same need. So we’ve planned a full strategic annual planning session the second week of November.

The reality is that business planning — meaningful business planning — is addictive. Developing an annual business plan has helped my company grow more than any other single business activity.

Successful business plan sessions require a number of steps:

Set a date. At least a few weeks before your planning session, set aside a specific day or more. If it’s your first planning session ever, you may need at least a few days, especially if you have employees. If you work by yourself, perhaps you can do this in just a half day.

Set a place. Get out of the office. If you work at home, get out of your home. Turn off your cellphones. Set an auto reply on your e-mail. You’ve got to get away from the day-to-day distractions of your regular business.

Set an agenda. At least a couple of weeks before your meeting, start talking about what you want to cover. Ask employees or your partners for agenda items. Know what topics you want to cover and decide on about how much time you’ll devote to each topic. Figure out which areas of your business you want to address — products/services, marketing, administration, financial management, employees, etc. Recognize you won’t be able to get to all of them so make decisions at the time you establish your agenda.

Do your homework. Some agenda items require some homework before you can make decisions. For instance, if one of your agenda items is whether to launch a new marketing campaign, you’ll want to have some estimates of costs involved.

Bring your financial records. During your planning session, you’re going to evaluate what worked and what hasn’t in the past year. In particular, you’ll want to assess which activities have been the most successful in terms of profit, not just income.

Once you’re at your planning session:

List your goals. In each area you’ve identified, list goals you hope to accomplish in the coming year.

Get specific. Put details with each goal, especially numbers. Let’s say one of your goals is to increase sales. Don’t just say you’d like to double your income. Instead, list each product or service you offer, and set a goal of a specific number of customers and income for each.

Identify actions. Identify the steps necessary to achieve each specific goal. For instance, if you’ve decided to increase marketing, list the specific ways you’ll do this, such as advertising, trade shows, direct mail, etc. Estimate the time and money each action will take.

Assign tasks. Determine who will be responsible for carrying out each step.

Set priorities. Rate highly the things you must do to survive. Next, choose those activities with the highest chance of success. Don’t try to do everything; it’s better to eliminate some goals altogether rather than attempting all partway.

Rhonda Abrams is author of The Successful Business Plan: Secrets & Strategies and president of The Planning Shop, publishers of books and other tools for business plans. Register for Rhonda’s free business planning newsletter at www.PlanningShop.com. For an index of her columns, click here. Copyright Rhonda Abrams 2006.

Need more guidance? Visit MyStrategicPlan to use our planning tools and software.