Category Archives: Planning Skills

Planning Perfect

Last year, they spent $12,000 on a planning consultant to help them put together a business plan that included Carl’s division. Since it was delivered, last February, only three people have even looked at it. No wonder Carl was reluctant when I asked for this year’s plan.

“Why the sad face?” I asked.

“Planning is one of those management skills that I always seem to put off,” Carl replied.

“Carl, at the end of this year, do you want your division to be exactly as it is, now?”

“No way, there are several things I would like to change.”

“Good. Carl, here are some questions for you:

How can you design those changes so they are well thought-out?

How can you communicate your ideas clearly to other people?

How can you bring people together to discuss your ideas so they have a better chance of getting done?”

Carl thought for a minute, then finally spoke. “I guess I should write down my ideas, to make sure they are clear in my own mind, then I can send them around to the other people on my team.”

“Would you like a small planning template to help you get started?” I asked. Carl’s eyes got wide as his head moved up and down.

If you would like a copy of the template I am sending to Carl, just ask.

How Long Have You Been Working This Late?

It was 6:30p when I stopped by Miguel’s office. “What’s up?” I asked.

Miguel picked his eyes up off the paper, holding his place on the schedule with a ballpoint pen. “Just going over tomorrow. It’s going to be another big day. Three special orders to get out the door.”

“Where is everyone, why are you still here?”

“Oh, we shut down at 4:30p. My crew is up with the chickens, tomorrow we start at 6:30a. I run a staggered shift. The first guys get the day started, then we’re full strength by 7:30a. The first wave is off by 3:30p, while the second wave picks up the pieces for the day.”

“Why are you still here?” I repeated.

“Well, there is just a bunch of little things that have to be done each day. Sort of out of control, huh? This won’t last forever. My schedule is getting better.”

“How long have you been working this late?”

“Gosh, ever since I became the supervisor, I guess. But it’s going to get better, soon.” Miguel looked optimistic.

I didn’t believe him.

What’s Your Story for 2012?

This is the time of year we create resolutions and set goals. It’s valuable thinking.

“What is the most significant thing you wish to accomplish in 2012?”
“What is the major benefit to you, if you are able to accomplish that?”

Two good questions.

What has to change about your story to make that happen?

We all have a story. Our story creates the meaning for our behavior. What has to change about your story? In your story, what do you have to let go of? In your story, who do you have to become?

When your story changes, your ability-to-accomplish changes. And what-you-accomplish, changes you.

What’s your story for 2012?

Second Step, Looking Outside

In my previous post, Structure for Strategic Planning, I outlined a concept called the Business Model Canvas, from a project compiled by Alexander Osterwalder. This process contains three steps.

  1. Document the CURRENT Business Model (using the Business Model Canvas)
  2. Identify and document external trends that will impact your Business Model
  3. Create the FUTURE Business Model (using the Business Model Canvas) focusing on those elements you have to change in response to those external trends.

While there are nine elements in the Business Model Canvas, they can be grouped into four categories that are useful for Steps 2 and 3.

1 – Resources

  • Key Partners
  • Key Resources
  • Key Activities

2 – Value Proposition

  • Value Proposition (aka USP, Unique Selling Proposition)

3 – Customer

  • Customer Segments
  • Customer Relationships
  • Customer Channels

4 – Financial

  • Cost Structure
  • Revenue Streams


These groupings are helpful specifically in identifying external trends that will have impact on your Business Model. Here are some questions –

Resources
What is the financial condition of your Key Partners?
What is the flexibility of your Key Partners?
What could disrupt your Value Chain?
What could impact internal teams?
What regulations could change the availability or the way we use our resources?

Value Proposition
What will change about our competitor’s Value Proposition?
How will technology impact our Value Proposition?
What new competitors will enter our market?
What will change about our customers expectations? Demands?

Customer
What could change the financial position of our customers?
What could change the way our customer uses our products or services?
What demographic trends will impact our market?

Finance
What will change about our cost structure? Higher prices? Deflation?
What will change related to personnel costs?
What will change in our regulatory environment?
What will change about our price points related to our cost structure?
What will change about the way our customer purchases our product or service?
Is there a different way to derive revenue from our Value Proposition?

There are a hundred other questions, but this will get you started on this second important step.

Structure for Strategic Planning

So, how do we talk about the long term future? Most long term (strategic) planning discussions falter. Managers seldom work through long term planning scenarios.

Long Term is a discussion outside the bounds of tangible concrete circumstances. It is a conceptual discussion.

For years, I have used a planning template and approach which I recently found compiled and published by Alexander Osterwalder in an open source project called Business Model Generation. The central piece of the project is a long term planning template called the Business Model Canvas.

In its one page form, it allows a group to deconstruct the elements of its business model into nine elements.

  • Key Partners
  • Key Resources
  • Key Activities
  • Cost Structure
  • Value Proposition
  • Customer Segments
  • Customer Relationship
  • Customer Channels
  • Revenue Streams

This Business Model Canvas provides the structure for an orderly discussion, an orderly conceptual discussion about the way the business is put together. And that’s our Inventory, as of today.

The second step of this process is to examine external forces (trends, competitive pressure, economics, demographics, regulatory pressures) that will impact on each of the nine elements.

The third step is to redefine the nine elements in response to those external forces. This third step is the work product of the long term planning discussion.

A structured conceptual discussion, strategic planning.

An Exercise in Superlatives

“It’s much easier to have a conversation (planning session) about the short term future, but how do we talk about the longer term future?” I asked.

Walter visibly nodded, then shook his head from side to side. “Not sure. I mean, I think we try. The closest thing we have is our company Mission statement, our company Vision statement.”

“There are times,” I chuckled, “when I threaten to steal all the Vision statements off the wall, shuffle them up and replace them in the dead of night. See if anyone notices?”

Walter piled on, “Yes, our Vision statement sounds pretty much like most of the other Vision statements out there. We want to be the premiere provider of high quality products and services, exceeding our customer’s expectations, using innovative solutions to build a brand recognized around the world.

“A perfect attempt at thinking conceptually, into the future. What was the process you used to come up with your Vision statement (that sounds a lot like every other Vision statement)?”

Walter grinned. “It was ugly. The most disorganized meeting I think we have ever had. The instructions were to create a timeless statement that captures the essence of business, to create a picture, five years into the future. It turned into an exercise of superlatives.”

Not Short Term Tactics

“So, what’s the purpose of planning?” I asked again. “Specifically what’s the purpose of strategic planning. You talk about the uncertainty of the future?”

“You know, I am all for simplicity, but sometimes, the world is complex. There are all kinds of things that can affect our business. Looking ahead 30-60 days is easy. We know what projects we have, who the customers are, what materials we need and which team will do the work. But looking out three years, the conversation changes.”

“I will agree the conversation changes,” I nodded. “In what way?”

“When we look out three years, we don’t know what projects we will be working on, who our customers will be, what materials we will be using or even who will be on our team. All we can assume, is that we will still be in business, solving a customer’s problem.”

“So, what’s changed about the conversation?”

“Obviously, the Time Span. We are looking further out. But what has really changed is that we are no longer talking about concrete, tangible things. We are talking about uncertainty. It’s not easy to describe because it is a discussion about the future.”

“So, we are not talking about short term tactics, we are talking about long term concepts. And that’s why this conversation is unsettling. It is easy to talk about tangible, concrete things, but we are not used to talking conceptually.”

What Will Change?

Now we were getting somewhere. “Something would change?” I repeated.

“Well, yes,” Walter started. “We could do the same thing over and over, and be successful, until something changed.”

“So, when we talk about planning, what would be valuable to talk about. Where is the real value in planning?”

Walter was still hoping he hadn’t painted himself into a corner. “You’re right. The real value in planning is talking about what will change. Maybe that is what is unsettling about the process. We talk about change, things that might happen or might not happen, things we don’t know about. Then we attach a revenue number to it, like we are the most accurate weather forecaster in the world. That is the unsettling part.”

“Are you trying to do two things at cross purpose?”

Walter nodded again, “Yes, we talk about the uncertainty of the future and then try to nail down a black and white number all in the same sentence.”

Something Will Change

“So, what good is planning?” I repeated. “What would happen if we did NO planning?”

“You know, that’s a great question. I don’t know that anything would change. To know what to do, tomorrow, we just have to look at what we did yesterday.”

“So, just look at yesterday, do the same thing again and we can expect the same result?” I summarized.

Walter nodded his head and chuckled, “Pretty much. And at the end of the year, our revenue number would be about the same, hopefully a little better.”

“So, how long could you keep that up?” I prodded. “I mean, successfully doing the same thing over and over and over? Could you do that, forever?”

“Well, not forever,” Walter smiled. “At some point, something will change.”

“Something will change?” I asked.

Two Days Jabbering

“Then, what’s the purpose?” I prodded. “What is the purpose for planning? What is the value, spending two days jabbering?”

Walter was quietly making sure he hadn’t painted himself into a corner. “Okay, the planning process has virtue. But the process is unsettling. We call it strategic planning, but I don’t think we talk much about strategy. We try to create an annual revenue number and then talk about why the production line broke down last week. That’s not strategy.”

“So, talking about the production line is unsettling?” I asked.

“No. We can talk about the production line. It’s just that planning is a discussion about the future. We are supposed to create this vision of the future, but we talk about stuff that happened last week. And no matter how great we paint this picture of the future, the production line will always break down, or our customer’s project will be delayed, or a competitor will come in with a cheaper price. What good is planning?”