All Strategies are Not Created Equal

Last week I wrote about Rethinking Strategy and the concept of Real-Time Strategic Planning, based on a book called The Nonprofit Strategy Revolution by David La Piana. While this book is focused on the nonprofit sector, I believe the concepts have wonderful application for both for-profit and not-for-profit businesses. Another concept in the book that I found really compelling is around the Strategy Pyramid. This article will dig into this concept and how it may be a useful way for you to think about strategy in your business.

Traditionally thinking around strategic planning conjures up memories of massive information gathering, multi-day farming sessions, and binders filled with fancy reports. Real-Time Strategic Planning is much more nimble and relevant to today’s fast paced business environment. It is built on the foundation of a strong vision or mission and gives a business the ability to quickly adapt as new challenges or opportunities arise.

Another common trait of traditional strategic planning is that oftentimes the strategies are not strategies at all. Through the traditional planning process many things come up that would be good for the business to focus on. These could be goals, programs, operational processes, technology, or something else all together. While important, these things are not necessary “strategy level” items. At least not Organizational Strategies.

This brings us to La Piana’s Strategy Pyramid. The Strategy Pyramid is made of three levels of strategies:

  • Operational Strategy (bottom)

  • Programmatic Strategy (middle)

  • Organizational Strategy (top)

In this pyramid, the base is made up of Operational Strategies, Programmatic Strategies are in the middle and Organizational Strategies are the top.

Operational Strategies

All strong organizations are built upon a strong base of administrative processes and management systems. In order to run effective programming and have a positive impact on the community a nonprofit must rest upon the solid base of strong operations. To deliver quality products and grow sales a for profit business must have the same solid foundation. Strong operations ensure the “trains run on time” (quote from my friend Cameron Nicholson).

Operational Strategies are the initiatives designed to improve efficiencies, execution, or responsiveness. These could include any number of things. Some examples include:

  • New software will help you manage your campaign more efficiently

  • A Diversity and Inclusion training to grow your staff team

  • Preventative maintenance plans to protect your assets

  • Initiatives to improve communications with staff or customers

Generally speaking, operational strategies are those things impacting the infrastructure of the business, such as human resources, finance, technology or communications.

Programmatic Strategies 

In the nonprofit world, programs are where the “rubber hits the road.” They are how an organization delivers their mission to the world and provides the impact they intend for their community. In the for profit universe, this layer of strategies is likely the products or services the business sells. In both instances, when a customer or community member thinks of the business, it’s the programs or products that they usually think of first.

Programmatic Strategies are the decisions around what activities/products will be delivered and how they will be delivered. Here are a few of the decisions that could lead to Programmatic Strategies:

  • Delivering programs in-person on on-line

  • Providing carry-out or delivery

  • Narrowly focusing your products or offering a broad range

  • One product/program, a few, or many

Programs (or products/services) sits on top of the operations; they are supported by that solid base.

Organizational Strategies

On the top of the pyramid are the Organizational Strategies. These strategies honor and are developed in order to fulfill the organization’s mission or the company’s vision. They take into account trends happening in the market, challenges coming from competitors, opportunities from partnerships, and their unique deliverables. Organizational Strategies are the big picture actions or activities the business will take to move towards achieving its mission or vision. Organizational Strategies include things like:

  • Expanding to new service areas

  • Establishing an intentional brand or culture

  • Shifting funding sources

  • Expanding to online retail

Even though the Organizational Strategies are on the top of the pyramid, this is actually where we start when formulating strategy for a business.

Start Building at the Top

With almost any construction project you start at the base and build up. This process of strategy formation does just the opposite, It starts with clarifying mission and/or vision and builds down through the layers. The mission/vision is the heart of the business, its purpose for being, and the very core of all decision making. It’s a solid practice to regularly visit the mission/vision to keep everyone focused on why the business exists. Your organizational strategies are the ways in which you will work towards your mission/vision. To quote La Piana: “Organizational Strategy is about who and what the nonprofit is in the larger world. It’s about organizational identity, direction, brand, and market position.” Same goes with for profit companies.

Once Organizational Strategies have been established, it gives clarity to the kinds of programs, products or services that should be delivered and how they will reach the participants and customers. Programmatic Strategies can be developed which support and align with the Organizational Strategies. After these top two layers are in place, Operational Strategies can be created in order to best serve the strategies that rest upon this base layer. By building each layer based on the strategies above it, each segment is connected and creates a coordinated set of actions. Programmatic and Operational Strategies can also be thought of as large or involved goals which will help you work towards your Organizational Strategies.

Examples

To help give some clarity, here are a couple of examples of how strategies may look in a for profit company and a nonprofit agency.

  • For profit clothing retailer:

    • Organizational Strategy: In addition to our thriving catalog and website sales we will add pop-up stores in order to see if physical locations will appeal to our customers.

    • Programmatic (Product) Strategy: This summer we will have pop-up stores at festivals in the three states where our sales are highest. We will provide our top selling summer items in a variety of sizes and limited colors.

    • Operational Strategies: In order to support our summer pop-up stores we will need to research and invest in a mobile pay system and mobile store hardware (racks, displays, tent, and changing booth). A dedicated staff will research and secure venues as well as create a schedule and communication system.

  • Nonprofit environmental agency:

    • Organizational Strategy: Our mission is to create a sustainable planet with future generations in mind. To this end we will focus on improving air quality in the metropolitan community we serve.

    • Programmatic Strategy: Our signature program will be a tree planting initiative which will engage volunteers and school or camp youth groups in planting trees. The program will involve education and follow-up care to ensure long-term impact.

    • Operational Strategies: Funding will be central to supporting the tree planting project. Development will focus on grant writing and corporate sponsorships. Additionally, a dedicated staff will be responsible for identifying locations, recruiting volunteers, securing youth groups and coordinating events.

These examples are greatly simplified, but they clearly illustrate the importance of each strategy building upon the one before it. Thinking of strategies as a coordinated set of actions not only reduces waste, it helps propel you towards your vision/mission.

If you would like to explore Real-Time Strategic Planning for your business or organization, email me at kim@athena-coco.com to schedule a free 30-minute consultation. Calm the Chaos by streamlining your strategy development, and find time to focus on what’s important to YOU.

Rethinking Strategic Planning

Any business or nonprofit with a strategic plan developed prior to February 2020 now likely realizes the limitations that come with a traditional 3 to 5 year plan. I doubt there were many strategies in place to help your business deal with a global pandemic. And yet, that is exactly what hit us and continues to challenge many businesses and organizations.

Thinking strategically about where you want to take your business is a key component in making sure you get there. After all, having a great vision for the future of your business is only half the battle. You also need plans and steps to get you there; as well as, communication with and buy-in from your team. If you are still in the process of crafting your vision you might want to go back and read this and maybe this to work on that piece of your business leadership. Once you are crystal clear on your vision, you need to mobilize every member of your team towards reaching that vision. That’s where strategy comes in.

Strategy is defined as:

A plan of action or policy designed to achieve a major or overall aim.

This is a pretty simple definition for something that is so important to the success of your business. This article is going to share some of my ideas on how best to create strategy for your business, along with some of my key take-aways from a book called “The Nonprofit Strategy Revolution” by David La Piana. While the book is focused on strategic planning for the nonprofit sector, the points I will share are applicable for both for profit and nonprofit businesses.

Traditional Strategic Planning

The first point I want to share is around the timing of strategic planning. Traditionally, every 3 to 5 years organizations spend exorbitant amounts of time and energy on creating a beautiful strategic plan. It would involve input from stakeholders and volunteers, customers and staff. Every word would be crafted to be just right. In larger organizations they would often hire a graphic designer add in images and charts and graphs to make it really beautiful for sharing and showing off. There are several problems with this traditional method of strategic planning.

  1. First and foremost is that society and business move too quickly these days for a plan to be relevant for more than a year or so. Businesses need to be much more responsive to the ever changing world.

  2. Building on the first point, your business is likely also changing quickly. As you continue to work towards your vision you will need to continuously recalibrate to ensure you’re still on target.

  3. When a business commits significant time and resources to a strategic planning process, they are often burnt out on the whole thing and they don’t want to even think about strategy for a while. Big mistake since your strategies should be driving your goals, actions and decision making.

  4. Those shiny impressive documents often end up in a drawer or on a shelf, never to be looked at again, until the calendar says it’s time for another planning process. A plan that is not actively referenced and measured is of little value.

Real-Time Strategic Planning

The concept that is laid out in David La Piana’s book provides a method of creating strategy that is much more responsive and relevant than the traditional process. With the need to adapt quickly to new information and dynamics, any business can benefit from implementing the Real-Time Strategic Planning Cycle. Three key components that really differentiate this process from the traditional include:

  • Strategy Screens

  • Big Questions

  • Ongoing Implementation

Strategy Screens

In a traditional planning process the business usually takes time to clarify their mission and/or vision, who they are as a company, and their organizational identity. That part is similar in the Real-Time process. The next step is what really looks different as the business uses that information to create “Strategy Screens”. These are criteria the organization will use to analyze potential strategies they might implement when faced with challenges and opportunities. The Strategy Screens helps the company determine if the potential strategy is consistent with their organizational identity.

Every company’s Strategy Screens will be unique to their organization and will likely evolve over time and as needs change. Screens are written in the form of a statement that each potential strategy is compared against. For example, La Piana’s suggests that most companies will have something similar to these two screens:

  • The strategy is consistent with our mission/purpose.

  • The strategy builds on our current competitive advantage(s).

Each business will have between 5 and 8 screens. Other topics that are important to compare the potential strategies to are things like breaking-even or surplusing, sustainability, human capacity, consistency with brand, and honoring key relationships. By developing Strategy Screens thoughtfully and intentionally AND before a crisis or opportunity presents itself, will simplify your decision making. This process helps you focus on what is important as an organization and avoid being reactionary or losing sight of who you are when the pressure is on.

Big Questions

When a challenge or opportunity presents itself, rather than jump to the potential strategies, the Real-Time process involves determining the “Big Question”. The Big Question frames the challenge/opportunity and can drive the potential strategies. For example, when the pandemic hit, restaurants struggled significantly. Options for the Big Questions for businesses that particular industry may have been things like:

  • How will we stay in business?

  • How can we change our business to meet new needs?

  • How will the restaurant industry survive?

  • What can we do to support our community in new ways?

This is a short-list, I’m sure there are many more that came up. Notice that the questions will drive different strategies. It’s good to ask the question in several different ways to determine what will be best for your business. In the end you may decide that you need to combine several of the questions in order to develop the right potential strategies.

After determining your Big Question for a given issue and coming up with all the potential strategies, you go back and measure them against your Strategy Screens. Make a simple graph with the different strategies along the top and the screens along the left side. Test each strategy against each screen to see how they measure up. This tool should make it easy to see which strategies measure up best with the screens you have committed to.

Ongoing Implementation

In order to make strategic planning valuable, it needs to produce results, right? Strategies in and of themselves do not lead to action. Once you use the Strategy Screens and Big Questions to determine the strategy or strategies you will implement moving forward, you need to develop goals, action steps and accountability. In the restaurant example, if you decide your strategy is going to involve shifting your servers to meal deliverers, that alone will not get you there. You need to break it down.

I think this is where the Real-Time process really shines and produces results you just don’t see from the traditional process. By looking so far down the road, even when the traditional system sets clear goals, actions and accountability, they are usually so far reaching that the company loses sight of them and they become irrelevant before they are completed. Real-Time strategies are addressing immediate challenges or opportunities; therefore, the goals and actions that are developed in this process are crucial to moving the organization forward. Simple tracking tools that are reviewed weekly will keep everyone on track and accountable.

This is a very simplified explanation of what I believe to be key differentiators between these two strategic planning processes. It’s not meant to cover everything, rather to help you understand the value of looking at strategy creation in a new and innovative way. I utilize many of these concepts when working with businesses to help them become thoughtfully responsive, while forging ahead.

If you would like to explore Real-Time Strategic Planning for your business or organization, email me at kim@athena-coco.com to schedule a free 30-minute consultation. Calm the Chaos by streamlining your strategy development, and find time to focus on what’s important to YOU.