Thursday, July 7, 2011

Strategy - Who cares? What's it worth?

Strategy has gone through ups and downs, ins and outs historically.  From the graduate school course I've taught on it, it has cycled through periods where companies spend massive resources gathering data, reporting up in endless detail, and creating strategy, all the way to periods where some companies rejected the idea of having one at all (we seem to be closer to that, now).


An article in Harvard Business Review said "It’s a dirty little secret: Most executives cannot articulate the objective, scope, and advantage of their business in a simple statement. If they can’t, neither can anyone else" (Collis & Ruskad, 2008, p. 83).

So what?  What's lost if most people in the organization couldn't say what the strategy is?

A couple of important things - coherent decision-making at the right levels, and alignment.

Coherent decision-making means that everyone who might have to make a decision knows the direction and priorities.  That reduces waste of precious resources (like the leader's time!), and costly errors.

Alignment is a subtler benefit.  When everyone knows where the organization's heading, and why, and that direction and strategy mean something to the people in the organization who have to make it happen, better engagement happens.  The work means something, so people stick around, give more of themselves, care about quality and customers, and work together to achieve more.

Employee engagement is at an all-time low.  Some estimate that most people would leave their current jobs if they could find another one tomorrow.  What sort of performance does that mean?

So, if an organization doesn't have a strategy, or its members could not say what it is, where do you start?

That's in next week's blog...

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