A Definition of Strategic Planning: Information Sheet One Planning For Strategy Lo.1
A Definition of Strategic Planning: Information Sheet One Planning For Strategy Lo.1
A Definition of Strategic Planning: Information Sheet One Planning For Strategy Lo.1
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
• You can also obtain this information through telephone or in-person interviews,
questionnaires, client surveys or focus groups.
What are the projected costs (direct and indirect) of the program?
What are the revenue opportunities to be gained?
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.
Past success securing funding; strong potential to raise funds for this
program.
– 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
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:
• 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
• 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.