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| Five Common Mistakes
in Strategic Planning
The author, Mike Branton, is president of XL Design Professionals
Management Services Corporation, XL Design Professional’s management consulting
subsidiary. XL Design Professionals MSC delivers strategic planning services
as well as other business management consulting services to
A/E/E and related firms. He can be reached toll-free at 888.919.2121,
extension 106, or at mike_branton@rsausa.com.
XL Design Professional's Management Services Corporation
has noted some common mistakes made by A/E/E firms in their
strategic planning process. By avoiding these miscues, you
can prevent the development of a strategic plan that is superficial,
unsubstantiated, ineffective and sure to gather dust faster
than a fake plant in the lobby.
These mistakes include:
- Treating strategic planning as an event and not as a process.
This ensures that the resulting plan will not be thought
about except for one or two days during an off-site meeting
or "retreat." Market changes and shifts don’t
happen only from October to February. A/E/E executives must
be constantly assessing whether the plan is delivering the
intended results or not.
- Gathering input only from top management, yet inviting
as many people as can physically fit into that off-site
meeting location to promote buy-in. The meeting will accomplish
very little. Many people will not be adequately informed
to constructively participate. Attempts will be made to
please everyone. Whatever strategic initiatives come out
of the meeting will be so diluted that instead of being
value creating, they will be value destroying.
- Brainstorming about all the possible opportunities the
firm can pursue without supporting market/client research
or analysis of the required resources. In other words, the
group will have "hunches" about the potential
of opportunities and they may assume that enough money will
be available to execute a plan.
- Spending a significant amount of time on internally focused
initia-tives. A strategic plan focuses externally. The business
plan that supports the strategic plan will incorporate necessary
internal elements. Many times this internal focus is found
in the firm’s mission statement, resulting in one
that is not memorable, too long, and could apply to any
other A/E/E firm. It contains phrases like "hire only
the best people," "on-time and on-budget"
and "reasonable profit."
- Doing a poor job managing the implementation of the plan.
Many firms talk a lot about how the off-site meeting facilitated
team building. They document the plan by going to the expense
of publishing and distributing it, but with no explanation
about how the plan was derived, who is accountable, or what
it means to the firm’s future.
Avoiding these common mistakes will result in a stronger
and better strategic plan for your firm.
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