A Definition of Strategic Planning: Information Sheet One Planning For Strategy Lo.1

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Information sheet one 


Planning for strategy
Lo.1

A Definition of Strategic Planning


• Strategic planning is a management tool for several key purposes: to
help an organization do a better job, to focus its energy, to ensure
that members are working toward the same goals and to assess and
adjust its direction in response to an ever changing environment.
• Strategic planning provides the master plan an organization uses to
achieve its aims. It charts the direction and goals of the entire
organization and all aspects of its operation. In short:
• Strategic planning is a disciplined effort to produce fundamental decisions and
actions that shape and guide what an organization is, what it does, and why it does
it, with a focus on the future.
• In addition, strategic planning does the following:

 Shares an organization’s vision with a large internal and external audience.

 Clarifies and makes the organization’s mission specific. The process is strategic
because it involves choosing how best to respond to the circumstances of the
organization’s environment.

 Identifies clients, consumers and stakeholders served by the organization.

 Identifies unique strengths and weaknesses of the organization.

 Scans the relevant environment to find emerging opportunities and threats for an
organization.

 Involves the key people inside and outside the organization in the planning process.
⁻ The process is about planning because it involves intentionally
setting goals (choosing a desired future) and developing an
approach to achieving those goals.
• Creates a context for making choices about possible future
directions.
• The process is disciplined in that it calls for a certain order and
pattern to keep it focused and productive.
• These choices are fundamental decisions and actions that
must be made to reach a desired future. The plan ultimately is
no more (and no less) than a set of
decisions about what to do, why to do it, and how to do it.
• The strategic planning process can be complex and challenging,
but by using the basic ideas outlined above, you can develop
and execute a successful strategic plan.
• Strategic Thinking and Strategic Management
• Strategic planning is only useful if it supports strategic thinking
and leads to strategic management and, even more importantly,
execution. Strategic thinking and subsequent management
must result in action.
Dr. Jagdish Sheth, a respected authority on marketing and strategic
planning, provides the following framework for understanding
strategic management. He says that it means continually asking the
question “Are we doing the right thing?” It entails both attention to
the “big picture” and the willingness to adapt to changing
circumstances and consists of the following three elements:
 Formulation of the organization’s future mission in light of changing
external factors such as regulation, competition, technology and
customers.
 Development of a competitive strategy to achieve the mission.

 Creation of an organizational structure which will deploy resources to


successfully carry out its competitive strategy.
Reasons for Strategic Planning
• Why should your organization embark on a strategic planning
effort? After all, planning consumes resources and time and
takes away from handling the pressures of the moment.
• Furthermore, defining the direction and activities of an
organization’s future is a daunting endeavor. Despite the
magnitude of the task, however, there are many compelling
reasons for taking on the challenge. The process of strategic
planning can lead to:
 Creating a forum for understanding why the organization exists
and the values that should influence decisions.
• Fostering successful communication and building teamwork
among the board of directors, staff and external constituency.
• Defining a shared vision of the organization’s future that can
guide the current allocation of scarce resources — which is not
to predict the future, but to define the organization’s preferred
future and establish a perspective that will guide current
decisions.
• Laying the groundwork for meaningful change by stimulating
forward thinking and focusing attention on what is really
important to the organization’s long-term success.
• Participation in the process makes for a better-informed staff and
board and empowers them to be more effective leaders,
managers and decision makers.
• And they end up with a planning document that they can use to
effectively manage the organization. Between the planning
process and the realization of a final written plan, a number of
tangible benefits can emerge:
• An unambiguous understanding of the organization’s purpose,
mission and values among staff, board and external constituents,
with that understanding supporting an increased level of
commitment to the organization and its goals.
• A framework that guides and supports the governance of
the organization and orients board and staff toward more
strategic thinking and strategic management.
• A means of monitoring achievements and measuring
results.
• A blueprint for action.
• Improved services for clients.
• Information that can be used to “market” your
organization to the public and potential funders.
Organizing a Strategic Planning Committee
• The best approach to writing a successful strategic plan is
through teamwork.
• The purpose of a strategic planning team is to plan, coordinate
and lead the process of strategic planning for the organization.
You will need a team leader for this group. The size and
composition of the team will vary, depending upon the size of
the organization.
• The team should consist of individuals who can provide the
necessary input on every portion of the organization’s
functioning, encompassing all technical and budgetary aspects.
The Planning Committee

• The planning committee spearheads the planning process. That


means committee members are not responsible for doing all of the
work, but they are responsible for ensuring that the work gets done.
• Basically the committee is the quarterback for the strategic planning
effort, deciding which stakeholders to involve and how to involve
them, prioritizing or narrowing information for the organization to
discuss and evaluate, and creating initial drafts of documents.
• A planning committee made up of board members and staff is
typically selected by the executive director and the board president.
The committee should be convened once management reaches
a decision to go ahead.

Everyone involved in the planning process must talk the same


“planning language” and have a shared understanding of what
the process entails. Words such as purpose, mission, strategy,
strategic, goal, objective, vision and long range have different
meanings to different people; even the nonprofit and for-profit
sectors sometimes use these terms in different ways.
As part of this “getting ready” step in the planning process, the
planning committee should learn and agree on common
language and processes for their strategic planning effort.
Using Consultants
• Organizations can also look to consultants for information or
training on planning language, tools and processes. Many
organizations include an outside consultant in some or all of the
planning process.
• When considering whether to include consultants in the
strategic planning process, a planning committee should first
have a clear understanding of what it really wants from a
consultant and what assistance a consultant can actually
provide.
Checklist for Working with a Consultant
• The following list describe many of the issues described above and
is a handy reference for organizers as they to consider working
with and then establish a working relationship with a consultant.
 Clarify your broad expectations of the work a consultant will do.
 Decide roughly how much you want to spend.
 Talk with at least two consultants and check the references they
provide you.
 Ask each consultant you are seriously considering to submit a
written proposal that summarizes the work to be performed, the
time line and the cost.
 Make sure that you feel comfortable working with the
consultant you select.
 Develop a clearly word written contract that includes
the following:
– List of “deliverables.”
– A projected completion date.

– A schedule for payment.


– Checkpoints along the way at which the client and consultant
can evaluate
– Progress and resolve any problems that may have arisen.
– A mechanism by which either party can terminate the contract before it is

completed.
– The name of the person in your organization who has the authority to
agree to expenditures or approve the consultant’s work.
– The name of the person who will do the actual consulting work.
• The Strategic Planning Process

There are five fundamental steps in the planning process. These steps are a
recommendation, but they are not the only method for cooking up a
strategic plan.

Thoughtful and creative planners will add spice to the mix or elegance to the
presentation to develop a strategic plan that best suits their organization.
Step 1: Getting Ready
• To prepare for strategic planning, your organization must first
assess if it’s ready. While a number of issues must be addressed
in assessing readiness, that determination essentially comes
down to whether your organization’s leaders are truly
committed to the effort and whether they are able to devote the
necessary attention to the “big picture.”
• For example, when a funding crisis looms, or the founder is
about to depart, or the environment is so turbulent that
everyone is putting out fires, it may not make sense to take time
out for a strategic planning effort.
Once you determine that your organization is indeed ready to begin strategic

planning, you must then do four things to pave the way for an organized

process:

 Identify the specific issues or choices that the planning process should address.

 Clarify a role (who does what in the process).

 Create a planning committee to develop an organizational profile.

 Identify the information that must be collected to help make sound decisions.

The product developed at the end of Step 1 is called a work plan. (Depending on

the size of your organization, this part of the process can involve many key

individuals. It can be shortened, however, if your organization has only a handful

of staff that will need to provide input.)


Strategic Planning Readiness Criteria
• Commitment and support from top leadership, especially the
executive director and board president, to see the project through to
the end.
• Clear roles and expectations for all participants in the planning
process, including clarity as to who will contribute input to the plan
and who will be the decision makers.
• Access to relevant information for assessing the organization
(sufficient market research) and willingness to recognize and
respond to the organization’s internal and external environment
(strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats).
• At least one strategic thinker and at least one realist, willingness to
be inclusive and encourage broad participation so that people feel
ownership of and energized by the process.
• An adequate commitment of organizational resources to complete
the planning process as designed, for example, staff time, board time
and dollars to spend on the process (market research, consultants).
• An adequate commitment of organizational resources to
complete the planning process as designed, for example, staff
time, board time and dollars to spend on the process (market
research, consultants).
• A board and staff that understand the purpose of planning,
realize what it is and is not able to accomplish, and have
reached consensus about the desired outcomes of the planning
process.
• A true commitment to assessing current programs and to
meeting current and future client needs.
• A willingness to question the status quo and to look at new
ways of doing and evaluating things.
• Good working relationships and an ability to work through
conflicts among key players.
Planning Process Considerations
• As with any major effort, a strategic planning process has its
proper time and place in the life of an organization.
• Certain conditions and criteria must exist (and others must not) if
strategic planning is to be a creative, collaborative, successful
endeavor — so it is important to be honest when analyzing your
organization’s readiness to plan.
• The planning readiness criteria outlined above are the ideal
elements your organization should have in place before
committing to a strategic planning process.
• But when considering such an effort, the pitfalls to be avoided are
equally important.
• If you recognize your organization in any of the symptoms below,
step back and rethink the feasibility of a strategic planning
endeavor at this point in time.
• If many of the pitfalls presented below are present, then an in-
depth strategic planning process may not be appropriate at this
time.
• Even if your organization is halfway through the planning
process before realizing that it isn’t really ready to plan, you
should stop right there and address the barriers to strategic
planning before continuing with the process.
Strategic Planning Pitfalls 
• To o much formality or rigidity in the planning process so that it
lacks simplicity and restrains creativity.
• Top management that assumes that strategic planning is
something separate from the entire management process.
• Top management that assumes that it can completely delegate
the planning function to a planner.
• Top management so occupied in current problems (such as a
financial crisis or other extreme circumstance) that it has neither
the time nor the leeway to look far enough ahead to plan for the
future.
• Top management’s tendency to reject the decisions made during
the planning process in favor of its own intuitive decisions.
• Failure to involve line staff and members of the board in the
planning process.
• Failure of top management to include department and division
heads in developing plans for their departments.
• Failure to clear constraints and non-negotiable up front.
• Failure to create an organizational climate that is open to
planning and change.
Step 2: Developing the Mission and Vision Statements
• A mission statement is like an introductory paragraph: It must
communicate the essence of your organization.
• An organization’s ability to articulate this indicates its focus and
purpose fullness. A mission statement typically describes an
organization in terms of:
• Purpose: Why the organization exists and what it seeks to accomplish.

• Business: The main method or activity through which the organization


tries to fulfill this purpose.
• Values: The principles or belief system that guides an organization’s
members as they pursue the organization’s purpose.
MISSION STATEMENT
• A mission statement reflects the essence of an organization’s intent and
tells when, where and how it will fulfill its purpose.
VISION STATEMENT
• A descriptive sentence that presents a broad image of what success will
“look like” for an organization.
Step 3: Environmental Assessment
• Once your organization has clarified why it exists and what it does, it must
take a clear-eyed look at its current situation.
• Remember that part of strategic planning, thinking and management is an
awareness of available resources and an eye to the future environment so
that your organization can successfully respond to change.
• This step is about gathering up-to-date information about your
organization’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats and
performance — assessments that will highlight the critical issues that
your organization faces and that its strategic plan must address.
• Typically a planning committee will agree on no more than ten
critical issues around which to organize the strategic plan.
• The products that result from Step 3 are a “file” of concrete
information that can be used to make decisions and a list of critical
issues that demand a response from the organization — the most
important issues that the organization needs to address.
Environmental Assessment
• The process of gathering and analyzing the information needed
to make an evaluation of your organization in its environment.
The environmental assessment includes the following activities:
• Collecting internal and external stakeholders’ perceptions about
the organization.
• Evaluating programs’ impact on clients.

• Evaluating programs through a cost/ benefit analysis.

• Analyzing programs through a competitive analysis.

• Defining previous implied strategies.


Step 4: Developing Strategies, Goals and Objectives
• Once you have affirmed your organization’s mission and identified its
critical issues, it is time to figure out what to do about them: the broad
approaches to be taken (strategies) and the general and specific results to
be sought (the goals and objectives).
• Strategies, goals and objectives may come from individual inspiration,
group discussion or formal decision-making techniques — but in the end
the leadership agrees on how to address the critical issues.
• This can take considerable time and flexibility: Discussions at this stage
frequently require additional information or a reevaluation of conclusions
reached during the environmental assessment. It is even possible that
new insights will emerge that change the thrust of the mission statement.
• To create the best possible plan it is important that planners not be afraid
of going back to an earlier step in the process to take advantage of newly
available information.
• The product of Step 4 is an outline of the organization’s strategic
directions —the general strategies, long-range goals and specific
objectives of its response to critical issues.
• The product of Step 4 is an outline of the organization’s strategic
directions —the general strategies, long-range goals and specific
objectives of its response to critical issues.
STRATEGY
• A strategy is a coordinated approach or direction adopted by an
organization in response to a critical issue and/or goal.
GOALS
• Goals are described in a broad outcome statement that guides a program
or management function.
OBJECTIVE
• An objective is a precise, measurable, time phased result that supports
the achievement of a goal.
Step 5: Completing the Written Plan
• You’ve articulated the mission, identified the critical issues, and
agreed upon the strategies — so Step 5 essentially involves putting
all that down on paper.
• Usually one member of the planning committee, the executive
director, or even a planning consultant can draft a final plan
document and then submit it for review by all key decision makers
(usually the board and top staff).
• This is also the time to consult with top staff to determine how the
document will be translated into operating plans (the detailed action
plans for accomplishing the goals proposed by the strategic plan).
• This important action ensures that the plan addresses key questions
about priorities and directions in sufficient detail to serve as a guide.
• The end result will be a concise description of where the
organization is going, how it should get there and why it needs to go
that way — ideas that are widely supported by the organization’s
staff and board. The product of Step 5 is the Strategic Plan.
 
Information sheet Two  
Investigating the Current Environment
Lo.2

Purpose:
• In this information sheet, you will learn about conducting an environmental
assessment of your organization. This must be done from both an internal
and external perspective.
• Investigate mission and vision statements of the organization.
• Investigate current internal environment of the organization.
• Investigate current external environment of the organization
Assessing the Environment
• Strategic planning must include an environmental assessment because no
organization operates in a vacuum.
• The very definition of strategic planning discussed above stresses the
importance of focusing on the future within the context of an ever-changing
environment.
• It addresses the many political, economic, social, technological,
demographic and legal forces that change our world daily. The
extent of the skill at assessing the environment and responding
proactively to it — in other words, strategic planning, thinking
and management — determines who survives and uses
resources effectively.
• This unit outlines the process of gathering and analyzing the
information needed to evaluate your organization in its
environment. The environmental assessment includes the
following activities.
 Eliciting internal and external stakeholders’ perceptions about
the organization.
 Evaluating programs’ impact on clients.
 Evaluating programs through a cost/benefit analysis.
 Analyzing programs through a competitive analysis.
 Defining previous implied strategies.
• Focus on information such as environment and financial trends, a list of
competitors and client statistics.
• At the conclusion of an environmental analysis, the planning committee
will have concrete information that can be used to make decisions and a
list of critical issues that require a response from the organization — the
most important issues the organization needs to face.
A. Acquire Perceptions about Your Organization
• Part of getting a clear view of the environment and dynamics of your
organization is to look through the eyes of others.
• Internal and external stakeholders’ perceptions add valuable
information to an environmental assessment.
• The SWOT approach (see definition below) is a simple way to collect such
information. It helps focus the process by breaking it down into four broad
categories: 
 S What are the organization’s internal Strengths?
 W What are the organization’s internal Weaknesses?
 O What external Opportunities might move the organization forward?
T What external Threats might hold the organization back?
• Evaluating an organization’s general strengths and weaknesses and the strengths
and weaknesses of each of its programs typically requires many assessments.
• This starts with staff and board capabilities, quality of programs, reputation of
programs and organization, management information and financial systems and
office facilities and equipment.
• Successful organizations exploit strengths rather than just focusing on
weaknesses.
• In other words, this process isn’t just about “fixing” the things that are “wrong,”
but also about nurturing what is “right.”
• From here, you also need to ascertain which factors stand out
among all the factors and implications listed as being the most
important to your organization.
• Ask yourself which ones are aligned with your mission and which
ones your organization can influence. Next, you will need to
complete a SWOT analysis grid. See grid below.
• The same approach should apply to how you assess
opportunities and threats — the external trends that influence
the organization.
• These are usually categorized into Political, Economic, Social,
Technological, Demographic and Legal (PESTDL) forces, which
would encompass circumstances such as changing client needs
and regulations and increased competition.
• These forces can either help an organization move forward
(opportunities) or hold it back (threats). But opportunities that
are ignored can become threats, and threats that are dealt with
appropriately can be turned into opportunities.
The Six Most Important External Environment Factors Worksheet
• This table will assist you in clarifying external trends affecting
your organization. List Those most likely to have an impact and
identify the implications that follows from them.
B. Eliciting Board and Staff Perceptions 
• Because SWOT analysis is a primary means of receiving input from a
broad and representative constituency, it is important to include as
many staff and board members (your internal stakeholders) as possible.
• You can elicit their ideas and opinions through questionnaires, by
telephone or in-person interviews, facilitated organization-wide or small-
group meetings or a combination of these methods.
• Some organizations gather board and staff members in the same
meeting to discuss these ideas, while others have them meet separately.
• One way to elicit ideas and opinions is to brainstorm ideas on flipcharts,
using the SWOT method.
• After you record the lists of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities
and threats, you can group the listed ideas into logical topic or
issue groups to make the data easier to present and analyze.
• For example, you should group together all the ideas related to
staffing or program development together.
• One key topic to elicit responses about is internal infrastructure.
You can assess a range of internal infrastructure issues using the
worksheet shown below.
• You can use it with your internal stakeholders for a range of topics
including human resources, technology and program evaluation.
The key dimensions are importance and performance.
C. Gain External Stakeholder Perceptions 

• Just as the internal SWOT assessment allows your organization to collect a wide
variety of perceptions from internal stakeholders, a SWOT assessment by outsiders
can add a great deal to the process.

• External stakeholders (clients, funders, community leaders and potential


collaborators) can give the planning committee insight into community opinions of
what the organization does well, where it can improve, unmet community needs it
might address and other potential opportunities or threats.

• You can also obtain this information through telephone or in-person interviews,
questionnaires, client surveys or focus groups.

• In addition to asking external stakeholders about their general perceptions of


strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, you might also ask questions
specifically related to their “outsider” perspectives, such as:
 What does the stakeholder need or expect (criteria for performance) from the
organization?
 How well does the organization perform against those criteria (excellent, good,
fair or poor)?
 How well does the organization perform relative to its “competitors?”
D. Evaluating Programs
• A key component of an environmental assessment is the evaluation of program
effectiveness and efficiency, which helps generate informed decisions about
whether to continue or discontinue each program, maintain it at its existing
level, expand or change its direction or market it aggressively.
• Most program evaluations focus on both outcome (results) and process
(methods.) Out- come evaluation looks at whether a project achieved the
desired results.
• Process evaluation looks at internal project management, both staff
performance and the extent to which the project is successfully implemented.
• Program evaluations can be based on quantitative and/or
qualitative data. Quantitative data consist of fact-based
information obtained through a review of records and descriptive
statistics.
• It is generally easily collected and not easily disputed because it
translates experience into information that can be counted,
compared, measured and manipulated.
• Qualitative data consist of what people “say” about the programs
in interviews, focus groups or other meetings, direct or field
observation, reviews of written materials, informal feedback,
satisfaction surveys and questionnaires.
Cost/Benefit Analysis of Program Services

• Cost/Benefit Analysis: programs that entail comparing the costs of providing a


service or product with the benefits to be gained from that service or product. 
• One approach to evaluating organization programs is a cost/benefit analysis. As the
name indicates, this entails comparing the costs of providing a service or product
with the benefit gained from that service or product by asking a number of important
questions:

 What are the projected costs (direct and indirect) of the program?
 What are the revenue opportunities to be gained?

 What are the direct service benefits?


 What would it cost to purchase the service benefits on the open market?

 What intangible benefits are gained by either the organization or the client?
 What assumptions, risks, organizational capabilities, alternative methods, foreseeable
changes and other considerations should be taken into account?
Competitive Analysis of Programs
• Focus and competitive positioning are far better than an attempt to be all
things to all people. Furthermore, non-profits must concentrate on
delivering only those services where they can demonstrate value and
quality.

1. Competitive Position: the degree to which your organization has a


stronger capability and potential to deliver a particular program than
other such agencies — a combination of effectiveness, quality, credibility
and market share/dominance.
• Probably no program should be classified as being in a strong competitive
position unless it has some clear basis for declaring superiority over all
competitors in that program category.
Criteria for a “strong” competitive position include: 
 Good location and logistical delivery system.

 Large reservoir of client, community or support-group loyalty.

 Past success securing funding; strong potential to raise funds for this
program.

 Superior “track record” (or image) of service delivery.

 Large “market share” of the target clientele currently served.

 Better-quality service and/or service delivery than competitors.

 Superior organizational, management and technical skills needed for


the program.

 Most cost-effective delivery of service.


2. Fit: the degree to which a program “belongs” or fits within an organization.
Criteria for “good fit” include:
 Congruence with the purpose and mission of the organization.

 Ability to draw on existing skills in the organization.

 Ability to share resources and coordinate activities with other programs.

3. Program Attractiveness: the degree to which a program makes economic


sense as an investment of current and future resources — whether it easily
attracts resources.

4. Alternative Coverage: the extent to which similar services are provided. If


there are no other large or very few small, comparable programs being
provided in the same region, the program is classified as “low coverage.”
Otherwise, the coverage is “high.”
 
Information sheet Three 
Participating in feedback session
Lo.3

In this information sheet, you will learn about.


 Identify the most important issues facing organization
 Review session with appropriate person(s)
 Supervisor
 Teacher
 Authorized business representative or client
• Learn how to obtain feedback from essential in order to prioritize
which changes are most important and feasible to follow.
 What does it mean to obtain feedback from your constituent?
 Why should you obtain feedback from constituents?
 When should you obtain feedback from constituent s?
 How to ask yourself the right questions
 Obtaining formal feedback: conducting a survey
• Obtaining feedback from your program is vital to understand what
the program truly needs and how it perceives your organization. This
section explores how to obtain formal and informal feedback from
members within your company so that your group may improve its
program.
What does it mean to obtain feedback from constituents?
• By obtaining feedback, we simply mean asking questions to
determine something you want to know.
• Most often, feedback is required to determine how well people feel
your organization is doing, and also how important they believe the
goals of your agency are.
• Feedback may be obtained in a number of ways, some as simple as
having a casual conversation or reading articles and editorials in the
paper.
• Formal feedback--data that you can measure--is usually obtained
through one of the following methods:
– Personal interviews
– Phone surveys
– Written surveys or questionnaires

– The term constituents, as we use it here, may refer to a variety of people,


including those who are affected (directly or indirectly) by your company’s
work, elected officials, members of your partnership, journalists,
community leaders, and others.
Why should you obtain feedback from constituents?
– To understand how your organization is perceived
– To get a better understanding.
– To help prioritize tasks
– To generate renewed anticipation and interest in your program
– To have the information ready for future use (such as grant proposals and
questions from the press)
– To increase community awareness of who you are and what you do
– And overall, to improve your program
When should you obtain feedback from constituents?
– You should try to obtain informal feedback as an ongoing, continuous
process. Formal feedback may be done at differing times, including:
– As part of the planning process when you start your program.
– Any time you start (or are considering starting) a new program.
– At the end of a certain program sponsored by your group, such as a
two-day workshop discussing the risk factors for alcoholism, or a
summer bicycle helmet for youths program
– Periodically throughout the life of your initiative (perhaps once a year
or every two years)
How to obtain feedback from constituents
What do you want to know?
– Some information that you could gather just won't be used, and so it's
simply not worth the staff time to gather it.
– For example, perhaps you have received a grant to reduce teen
pregnancy in your community.
• Whether or not the community perceives teen pregnancy as a
problem may be less important to you than other issues, because
the program is going to be implemented either way.
• In such a case, it might make sense for your group to use your
resources in a different way, such as to determine what specific
needs regarding teen pregnancy need to be addressed.
Who has already done this?
• Check to see if someone, such as researchers or another agency,
has already done a survey in your community asking the same
questions that you would like answered. Your coalition is
undoubtedly busy enough; don't try to reinvent the wheel.
Who do you want to ask?
• Decide whom you would like to survey. There are a variety of
people you might decide to question, depending on what you
would like to find out.
Possible respondents might include:
– The targets of change, or those whose actions you would like to change

– The people most affected by the problem you are addressing

– Local administrators (directors, coordinators, principals, etc.)

– Researchers and field experts

– Members of your alliance

• Further, decide if you want to obtain your information in a closed


manner (surveying a select group of people) or in an open manner
(anyone who is willing to pick up a pencil or open their mouths for a
few minutes).
• Be careful not to ask administrators to tell you the needs of those
most affected; rather, ask those who are most affected themselves.
How many people would you like to ask?
• If you are only surveying the active members of a small coalition
(say, less than 50 members), you might try to survey everyone.
• If you would like to learn about the feelings of the teenagers in
your coalition with regards to drug abuse, however, you might find
it impossible to survey every teen, and instead randomly choose a
smaller, more workable group to question.
How do you want to ask people?
This may be done in a variety of ways, including:
– Listen to the opinions of people you know, researchers at planning program,
people who work in the same or a similar field, and anyone else you can
think of
– Suggestion boxes
– Feedback forms on publications such as brochures or on an agency
newsletter
– Designated "critique times at meetings"
– A formal survey: either by personal interviews, a phone survey, or a written
survey
Obtaining formal feedback: Conducting a survey
• You've decided to take the plunge and go all out with a formal survey.
But where do you start? How do you format your work and frame your
questions?
• There are volumes upon volumes of information suggesting how you
might do this, but please consider the following information as a
starting point when putting together your survey.
Decide how you would like to conduct your survey
• First, should it be written or oral?
• There are several advantages and disadvantages of each that you
should take into account:
• An oral survey (in person, on the phone) is often less formal, and may
be easier to initiate and conduct. However, the body language or tone
of the interviewer may affect the respondent's answers, and of course,
ambiguity is not an option for spoken interviews.
• Further, responses from an oral interview are more likely to be unclear
and confused, taking up valuable time as well as being difficult to chart.
• A written survey may be formal and exact, and thus in the long run more
efficient. However, it may be more difficult to convince people to respond to
a mailed written survey than to respond orally, despite the real amount of
time involved.
• Just think: if someone called and asked you to answer a few questions, you'd
probably say yes, unless you were really pressed for time. However, if you
got the same list of questions in the mail, you might think about answering
them, and then forget, or misplace the letter, or just throw it away.)
• To get around this barrier, consider giving a survey to a "captive audience,"
such as a group at a meeting or in a class.
Decide how to format your questions
• They may be written using open or closed questions:
 Closed questions allow the respondent to answer from a menu of different
choices. This menu might be as simple as responding to a yes/no question.
• It also might take the form of several words (for example, "Which of the
following seems to be the biggest health concern in our community?"), or a
rating scale ("On a scale of one to five, with five being most important, how
would you rate the importance of stopping merchants from selling alcohol
to minors?").
• A rating scale is often a simple yet very effective way to learn the feelings of
the people taking the survey.
 Open questions allow the respondent to answer questions in their own
words, without prompt from the survey.
• An example of an open question would be, "What do you think is the most
important health concern facing our community, and why do you think
so?"
• The advantage of using open questions is that you are able to get deeper,
more thoughtful answers than from closed questions. However, open
questions may also lead to unclear answers that are hard to interpret and
use.
• To get the best of both worlds, you might consider using a survey
with closed questions that leaves room for additional comments.
Don't forget your manners
• Be sure to thank respondents ahead of time, let them know how
you will use any information that you gather, and thank them again
afterwards.
Make it easy
• Keep your survey as short as possible while still getting the
information that you want to know. A good rule of thumb is
simply; don't ask questions you're not going to use.
Keep your cool
• Don't be frustrated if only a small number of letters surveys are
returned to you; in fact, you should probably expect this. A
"normal" return rate might only be about half of the surveys that
you send out are actually completed.
•  
 
Information sheet four
 
Finalizing and validate plan
Lo.4

• At the end of this session the trainees shall be able to:

– Create written plan to document

– Submit written plan to appropriate person(s) for approval

– Strategies of the organization

– Review feedback

• Mission Statements

In just a few sentences, a mission statement communicates the essence of an organization to its

stakeholders and to the public: one guiding set of ideas that is articulated, understood and

supported by the organization’s board, staff, volunteers, donors and collaborators.

A clear mission statement is one hallmark of a successful for your organization; conversely, an

unclear statement can cause wasted time, missed opportunities and failure to recognize

accomplished goals.
A. Components of a Mission Statement
• In defining “who” your organization is, a mission statement
should indicate the group’s purpose, business and, if desired,
its values.
• The “purpose” component explains what the organization
seeks to accomplish — why it exists and the desired result of its
efforts. A purpose statement usually includes two basic
elements:

• A verb that indicates a change in status (such as to improve, to


increase, to decrease, to eliminate).
• A description of the problem to be addressed or condition to
be changed (such as access to health care, poverty,
homelessness).
• For example, a company’s purpose might be “to increase access to
health care,” or “to decrease poverty” or “to eliminate homelessness.”

• Note that these examples focus on outcomes and results rather than
methods.
• They describe how the world is going to be different — what the
organization intends to change. Thus, the purpose of an agency serving
the homeless should not be described in terms of their method “to
provide shelter for homeless individuals.”
• It should be described in terms of a broader result, such as “to
eliminate the condition of homelessness in our region.”
• The “business” component though, does state the method or action
through which an organization pursues its purpose — how it goes about
addressing the stated problem.
• Some people prefer not to use the word “business” to describe this
component, but it doesn’t matter how it is labeled — just as long as the
action or method is clearly described. Business statements often include
the verb “to provide” or link a purpose statement with the words “by” or
“through.”
• For example, a housing agency might try to eliminate homelessness “by
constructing housing for homeless individuals,” or “by educating the
public and advocating for public policy changes” or “through counseling
and job training to homeless individuals.”
• The “values” component of the mission statement describes the
basic beliefs shared by members of the organization and practiced in
their work, such as a commitment to excellent services, innovation,
diversity, creativity, honesty or integrity.
• The values component might also state related beliefs. A vegetarian
association might assert that “eating vegetables is more
economically efficient and ecologically responsible than eating beef.”
• The values component highlights the important connection between
the nature of the organization’s work and people’s commitment to it.
Ideally, the personal values of staff and external constituents and
supporters align with the values of the organization.
• When developing a written statement of the organization’s values,
stakeholders have a chance to contribute to the articulation of these
values.
• They evaluate how well their personal values and motivations match
those of the organization and build their commitment to the
organization through their commitment to its values.
Vision Statement

• A vision is a guiding image of success. If a mission statement provides a


“blueprint” for the what, why and how of your organization’s work, then the
vision is the “artist’s rendering” of the realization of that mission.

• While a mission statement answers the questions about why the organization
exists, what business it is in and what values guide it, a vision statement
answers the question, “What will success look like?” It is the pursuit of this
shared image of success that inspires and motivates people to work together.

• Martin Luther King, said, “I have a dream,” and then offered a vision of what
that dream would look like that helped change a nation.

• That famous speech is a dramatic example of the power that can be


generated by a person who communicates a compelling vision of the future.
• John F. Kennedy did not live to see his vision for NASA come to
fruition, but he set it in motion when he said, “By the end of the
decade, we will put a man on the moon.”
• When it came time to appropriate the enormous funds necessary
to accomplish this vision, Congress did not hesitate.
• Why? Because Kennedy’s vision spoke powerfully to values the
American people held dear: America as a pioneer and world leader.
• An organizational vision statement might not put a man on the
moon, but it should be compelling in the same way that Kennedy’s
and King’s visions were: It should challenge and inspire the group to
stretch its capabilities and achieve its mission.
• The vision statement will often suggest both an external and an
internal vision for the organization.
• The external vision is an image that informs program strategies and
goals; it focuses on how the world would be improved, changed or
different if the organization achieves its purpose.
• The internal vision informs your organization’s management, organizational
strategies and goals; it describes what it would look like if it was operating
effectively and efficiently — the ideal image or reputation, funding,
partnerships, use of technology, board, staff and facilities, as well as major
past accomplishments and what makes it unique. 
• Drafting a Vision Statement
 
• Drafting a vision statement begins with intuition and ideas, evolves through
discussion and results in a shared sense of direction and motivation.
• The planning committee must fully engage in the process and should
designate one or two members to actually write the statement, but
certainly board and staff should be involved in initial brainstorming and
some subsequent discussion and review.
• As with any such process, differing ideas don’t have to be a problem:
People can encourage each other on to more brave and valuable ideas —
dreams of changing the world for which they are willing to work hard.
Writing the Strategic Plan
• The end is in picture. Now that everyone has had a chance to
contribute ideas, you’ve wrestled with all the options, made the
choices and worked out the details, all that remains is to commit
the ideas to paper and “make it official.”
A. Draft and Review Process
• One or two people should be responsible for writing the plan based
on the group’s ideas.
• The process of review and approval is the most important
consideration in this step, much more so than who does the
writing. Often an executive director will draft the plan, or the task
may be delegated to a staff or board member or a consultant who
has been working with the planning committee.
• In the end, it really doesn’t matter who writes the strategic plan.
What matters is that it accurately documents the decisions made by
the planning committee and represents a shared vision that has the
support of the entire organization.
• The planning committee should decide in advance who will review and
respond to the draft plan.
• Obviously committee members will participate in the review process, but
should the full board and the full staff also participate?
• The guiding principle of participation in the strategic planning process is
that everyone who will help execute the plan should have some input in
shaping it; whether this includes review of the final drafts of the plan is a
judgment call that depends on the particular circumstances of your
organization.
• Ideally, by the time the strategic plan is ready to be committed to paper,
you have already debated and resolved the big ideas, so revisions only
amount to small matters of adding detail, revising format or changing
wording in a particular section.
• If reviewers are bogged down in crossing too many “Ts” and dotting too
many “I’s,” the plan could linger in draft form forever.
• So the planning committee must exercise leadership in setting a realistic
time frame and in bringing the review process to a timely close.
• The committee needs to choose the level of review appropriate for the
organization, provide copies for review to the selected individuals and set a
deadline for submitting feedback (usually allowing one to two weeks is
sufficient).
• Upon receiving all the feedback, the committee must agree on which suggested
revisions to accept, incorporate these into the document and submit the
strategic plan to the full board of directors for approval.

Standard Format for a Strategic Plan


• A strategic plan is simply a document that summarizes, in about ten to fifteen
pages of written text, why your organization exists, what it is trying to
accomplish and how it will go about doing so.
• Its “audience” is anyone who wants to know your organization’s most
important ideas, issues and priorities: board members, staff, volunteers, clients,
funders, and peers at other organizations, the press and the public. It should
offer learning and guidance.
• The more concise and ordered the document, the greater the likelihood it will
be used and that it will be helpful in guiding the operations of the organization.
• Below is an example of a common format for strategic plans as well as brief
descriptions of each component to help writers as they begin to organize their
thoughts and their material.
• The point of the document is to allow the best possible explanation of the
organization’s plan for the future — the format should serve the message.

• Sample Format for a Strategic Plan:


• Table of Contents:
• I. Introduction by the President of the Board and Executive Director
• II. Executive Summary
• III. Mission and Vision Statement
• I V. Organization History and Profile
• V. Critical Issues and Strategies
• VI. Program Goals and Objectives
• VII. Management and Development Goals and Objectives
• VIII. Appendices (If Included)
• A. Environmental Assessment and Critical Issues
• B. Data and Assumptions about the Environment
• C. Summary of Client Surveys
• D. Membership of Board and Planning Committee
• E. Long-Range Budget Projections

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