7.8 Planning

Adapted by Stephen Skripak with Ron Poff; David Pickersgill; and Holly Jackson, PhD

Just as vision setting is the primary task of leadership (see section 7.2), planning is the primary task of management. There is some overlap between the two tasks but the distinction between the two is that a plan takes a vision and asks ‘ok, how do we get there?’ A vision is: “Let’s build a railroad which will span the length of the country, from coast to coast,” while a plan is the map showing the route that the railroad will take. The vision sounds exciting, the plan may be less immediately arresting, but both are needed for a successful outcome.

Here are some of the steps that managers may use, to take a vision and turn it into a strategic plan (or an established course of action):

Conduct a SWOT analysis

The next step in the strategic-planning process is to assess your company’s fit with its environment. A common approach to environmental analysis is matching the strengths of your business with the opportunities available to it. It’s called because it calls for analyzing an organization’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. It begins with an examination of external factors that could influence the company in either a positive or a negative way. These could include economic conditions, competition, emerging technologies, laws and regulations, and customers’ expectations.

One purpose of assessing the external environment is to identify both opportunities that could benefit the company and threats to its success. For example, a company that manufactures children’s bicycle helmets would view a change in federal law requiring all children to wear helmets as an opportunity. The news that two large sports-equipment companies were coming out with bicycle helmets would be a threat.

The next step is to evaluate the company’s strengths and weaknesses, internal factors that could influence company performance in either a positive or negative way. Strengths might include a motivated workforce, state-of-the-art technology, impressive managerial talent, or a desirable location. The opposite of any of these strengths could signal a potential weakness (poor workforce, obsolete technology, incompetent management, or poor location). Armed with a good idea of internal strengths and weaknesses, as well as external opportunities and threats, managers will be better positioned to capitalize on opportunities and strengths. Likewise, they want to improve on any weak areas and protect the organization from external threats.

For example, Notes-4-You might say that by providing excellent service at a reasonable price while we’re still small, it can solidify its position on campus. When the market grows due to increases in student enrollment, the company will have built a strong reputation and be in a position to grow. So even if a competitor comes to campus (a threat), the company expects to be the preferred supplier of class notes. This strategy will work only if the note-takers are dependable and if the process does not alienate the faculty or administration.

Set goals and objectives

Your vision affirms what your organization is generally committed to doing, but it doesn’t tell you how to do it. So the next step in the strategic-planning process is establishing goals and objectives. are major accomplishments that the company wants to achieve over a long period. are shorter-term performance targets that direct the activities of the organization toward the attainment of a goal. They should be clearly stated, achievable, and measurable: they should give target dates for the completion of tasks and stipulate who’s responsible for taking necessary actions.[1]

An organization will have a number of goals and related objectives. Some will focus on financial measures, such as profit maximization and sales growth. Others will target operational efficiency or quality control. Still others will govern the company’s relationships with its employees, its community, its environment, or all three.

Finally, goals and objectives change over time. As a firm reassesses its place in its business environment, it rethinks not only its mission but also its approach to fulfilling it. The reality of change was a major theme when the late McDonald’s CEO Jim Cantalupo explained his goal to revitalize the company:

“The world has changed. Our customers have changed. We have to change too. Growth comes from being better, not just expanding to have more restaurants. The new McDonald’s is focused on building sales at existing restaurants rather than on adding new restaurants. We are introducing a new level of discipline and efficiency to all aspects of the business and are setting a new bar for performance.”[2]

This change in focus was accompanied by specific performance objectives—annual sales growth of 3–5 percent and income growth of 6–7 percent at existing restaurants, plus a five-point improvement (based on customer surveys) in speed of service, friendliness, and food quality.

In setting strategic goals and performance objectives for Notes-4-You, you should keep things simple. Because you need to make money to stay in business, you could include a financial goal (and related objectives). Your mission statement promises “high-quality, dependable, competitively priced class notes,” so you could focus on the quality of the class notes that you’ll be taking and distributing. Finally, because your mission is to serve students, one goal could be customer oriented. Your list of goals and objectives might look like this:

  • Goal 1: Achieve a 10 percent return on sales in your first five years.
  • Objective: Sales of $20,000 and profit of $2,000 for the first 12 months of operation.
  • Goal 2: Produce a high-quality product.
  • Objective: First-year satisfaction scores of 90 percent or higher on quality of notes (based on survey responses on understandability, readability, and completeness).
  • Goal 3: Attain 98 percent customer satisfaction by the end of your fifth year.
  • Objective: Making notes available within two days after class, 95 percent of the time.

Tactical plans

The overall plan is broken down into more manageable, shorter-term components called . These plans specify the activities and allocation of (people, equipment, money) needed to implement the strategic plan over a given period. Often, a long-range strategic plan is divided into several tactical plans; a five-year strategic plan, for instance, might be implemented as five one-year tactical plans.

Operational plans

The tactical plan is then broken down into various operational components that provide detailed action steps to be taken by individuals or groups to implement the tactical and strategic plans. cover only a brief period—say, a month or two. At Notes-4-You, note-takers might be instructed to submit typed class notes five hours earlier than normal on the last day of the semester (an operational guideline). The goal is to improve the customer-satisfaction score on dependability (a tactical goal) and, as a result, to earn the loyalty of students through attention to customer service (a strategic goal).

 

Man takes notes on paper from the laptop sitting next to him.
Figure 7.3: A Note Taker

Key Takeaways

  • Planning for a business starts with discerning a vision —the process of establishing an overall course of action. See chapter 7.2 for more on this.
  • A SWOT analysis assesses the company’s strengths and weaknesses and its fit with the external environment.
  • Goals and objectives, or performance targets, are established to direct company actions, and tactical plans and operational plans implement objectives.

  1. Scott Safranski and Ik-Whan Kwon (1991). “Strategic Planning for the Growing Business.” U.S. Small Business Administration. Retrieved from: http://webharvest.gov/peth04/20041105092332/http://sba.gov/library/pubs/eb-6.pdf
  2. Franchise Bison (2003). “McDonald’s Announces Plans to Revitalize Its Worldwide Business and Sets New Financial Targets.” Retrieved from: http://www.bison1.com/press_mcdonalds_04072003

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7.8 Planning by Adapted by Stephen Skripak with Ron Poff; David Pickersgill; and Holly Jackson, PhD is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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