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Strategic Implementation Plan Development and Control

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Title: Strategic Implementation Plan Development and Control


1
Strategic Implementation Plan Development and
Control
Training
2
History 1
  • LRPP (Long Range Program Plan)
  • Historical means of strategic planning
  • Content and format mandated by the legislature
  • Includes goals, objectives and outcomes
  • Blueprint Commission
  • Meetings across the state
  • Feedback and comments from all stakeholders
  • Report with recommendations
  • Desire for concrete action to address issues

3
History 2
  • RTN for external facilitator
  • Change Team selected by ELT
  • 8 Meetings to develop Draft Strategic Plan
  • Draft Plan reviewed by ELT
  • Draft Plan vetted with stakeholders
  • Goals and objectives revised by steering
    committee
  • Final strategic plan approved
  • Implementation is next
  • Modifications may continue with it being a
    living document

4
Implementation Timeline
5
Definition of strategic plan
  • An organized, method, or series of activities or
    maneuvers for obtaining a specific goal.


6
Failure to Plan or Failure to Implement the plan
Oops!
Bang!
Bang!
7
Two Major Issues
  • Doing the correct thing.
  • Doing what you do in the best possible way.

8
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The strategic plan sets the direction and major
goals of DJJ What we are working to achieve. It
sets the stage to align all department processes
in a way that fully supports the departments
goals.
12
Strategic Plan
It lays out how we will achieve our mission
  • Our Mission
  • To increase public safety by reducing
    juvenile delinquency through effective
    prevention, intervention and treatment services
    that strengthen families and turn around the
    lives of troubled youth.

13
Strategic Plan
Target Outcomes
Impact
Indicators
Participants
Tactics
14
Strategic Plan Structure
  • Priority Goal (Major DJJ Strategic Goal)
  • Objective (Result needed to achieve Goal)
  • Targets (measureable target that would come from
    achieving the objective how you know you did
    it)
  • Tactics (what will be done to achieve the
    objective)
  • Participants (who should play a part in the
    design and/or deployment of the tactics)
  • Indicators (Measureable results that quantify the
    outcomes and indicate how well the tactics are
    being implemented)

15
Outcomes and Indicators
  • Goal 1 Strengthen prevention and Intervention
    Services
  • Outcome Percentage of youth who remain crime
    free six months after receiving prevention
    services.

The number is the indicator of outcome performance
The baseline is the starting point from which you
track change
Target the desired indicator value for the
outcome
16
Change Management
Any questions on history, or the strategic
plan? Next
  • The strategy for implementing
  • a new strategy

17
Change Characteristics
  • What is the scope of the change?
  • How many people will be impacted?
  • Who is being impacted?
  • Are people being impacted the same or are they
    experiencing the change differently?
  • What is being changed - processes, systems, job
    roles, etc?
  • What is the timeframe for the change?

18
Organizational attributes
  • What is the perceived need for this change among
    employees and managers?
  • How have past changes been managed?
  • Is there a shared vision for the change?
  • How much change is going on right now?
  • Work to understand the people and groups being
    impacted by the change. The organizational
    attributes are related to the history and culture
    in the organization and describe the backdrop
    against which this particular change is being
    introduced.

19
Impacted groups
  • Map who is being impacted by the change and how
    they are being impacted. A single change can
    impact different groups very differently.
  • Listing the impacted groups and showing how they
    will be impacted enables specific and customized
    plans later in the change management process.

20
Team structure
  • The change management team structure identifies
    who will be doing the change management work.
  • The key in developing the strategy is to be
    specific and make an informed decision when
    assigning the change management responsibility
    and resources.

21
Sponsor Coalition
  • The sponsor coalition describes the leaders and
    managers that need to be on-board for the change
    to be successful.
  • Starting with the primary sponsor (the person who
    authorized and funded the change), the sponsor
    model documents the leaders of the groups that
    are being impacted by the change.
  • The change characteristics will determine who
    must be part of the coalition. Each member of the
    sponsor coalition has the responsibility to build
    support and communicate the change with their
    respective audiences.

22
Risk Assessment
  • The risk of not managing the people side of
    change on a particular change can be very high.
  • Changes that are more 'dramatic' and farther
    reaching in the organization have a higher change
    management risk. Likewise, organizations and
    groups with histories and cultures that resist
    change face higher change management risk. In
    developing the strategy, overall risk and
    specific risk factors are documented.

23
Anticipate Resistance
  • Many times, after a project is introduced and
    meets resistance, members of the team reflect
    that "they saw that reaction coming." In creating
    the change management strategy, identify where
    resistance can be expected.
  • Are particular regions, providers or departments
    impacted differently than others?
  • Were certain groups advocating a different
    solution to the same problem?
  • Are some groups heavily invested with how things
    are done today? Note particular anticipated
    resistance points depending on how each group is
    related to the change

24
Special Tactics
  • Identify any special tactics that will be
    required for each particular change.
  • The special tactics address organizational
    knowledge or learning from the strategy
    development related to the change and how it
    impacts different audiences.
  • Throughout the change implementation, special
    tactics may need to be revised.

25
More Special Tactics
  • The groups identified in the strategy should each
    be addressed specifically in the communication
    plan.
  • Steps for building and maintaining the support of
    those impacted and implementing change should be
    planned from the beginning.
  • Each of the subsequent change management plans
    and activities should be guided by the findings
    in the change management strategy.

26
Important Keys To Success
  • Think it through in advance. (be specific)
  • Involve those who must implement or who could
    resist the change in the development of the
    change.
  • People tend to resist change that they have not
    been part of developing, so BUILD SHARED
    OWNERSHIP THROUGH MEANINGFUL PARTICIPATION.

27
Change Management Plans
  • Communication plan
  • Sponsorship roadmap
  • Coaching plan
  • Training plan
  • Resistance management plan
  • Reinforcement planning

Develop Collaboratively
28
Any Questions on Change Management?
Next Purpose of Implementation Plan
29
Why do an Implementation Plan?
  • Strategic planning can be exhilarating when
    coming up with new visions and missions and
    values, talking about long-standing issues in the
    workplace and coming up with new and exciting
    opportunities.
  • Without careful implementation planning and
    diligently ensuring actions are carried out --
    the plan ends up collecting dust on a shelf.

30
Strategy Goal Target Tactics Task
Target Outcomes
Impact
Indicators
Strategic Plan
Implementation Plan
31
The Logic for an Implementation Plan
  • Strategic Planning is thinking through the right
    things to do.
  • Implementation Planning is thinking through the
    best way to do the right things.
  • All the planning in the world will accomplish
    nothing unless you take action.
  • Taking action is implementing a series of
    processes according to the plan.
  • Change happens, so you must manage the action in
    accord with the plan.

32
The Implementation Plan specifies how DJJs major
goals are to be met. It specifies what will be
done, including who, when, how, where, and how
success will be known. It is process and
management detail.
33
Any Questions on Purpose of Implementation Plan?
Next How to develop an implementation plan
34
Some basic concepts in Strategic Planning and
process Development
  • You will need to take generic directional
    information as well as specific goal and
    objective related detail, put them in context of
    the reality of daily work, budgets, resistance,
    and change. Then decide who does what, when, how,
    and how it all fits together and, you have to do
    it in a collaborative way that builds support.
  • Finally you need to identify the early warning
    and end result measures to manage it.

35
Basic Plan Development Rules
  • Meaningfully involve those who will have to carry
    out the plan and those who will need to supply
    something needed for successful implementation.
  • Identify alternatives that meet the needs of
    those who serve your area as well as those who
    you serve.
  • Use the Strategic Plan as your guide.
  • Use data, use knowledge, for early warning and
    end result management.
  • If you need help, ask for it.

36
Planning
Priority Goal
Work
37
  • "Process"

Focus on the generic way work gets done first
Then plan tasks, jobs, who does the work, and how
you know success (data). The process must be
supported by the structure of the organization.
Its the process that causes the results.
38
Strategy to Objective to Tactics
Tasks
39
How it fits together
Work Flow and Time
Result
Result
Result
Result
The Implementation Plan
The Strategic Plan
40
  • Boundary Analysis

Expectations
Requirements
Requirements
Next Process
Supplier Process
Expectations
Task Process
Information
Information
Deliverables
Deliverables
Training
Procedure
Budget
Resources
People
Environment
Equipment
41
Gantt Chart
  • A Gantt chart allows you to assess how long a
    project should take.      
  • A Gantt chart lays out the order in which tasks
    need to be carried out.      
  • A Gantt chart helps manage the dependencies
    between tasks.
  • A Gantt chart allows you to see immediately what
    should have been achieved at a point in time.    
     
  • A Gantt chart allows you to see how remedial
    action may bring the project back on course.

42
Gantt Chart
43
Document the Order Timing
44
Look For
  • Gaps Objectives with no process to meet them
  • Duplication Objectives with multiple processes
    in place to meet them
  • Waste Processes being done for which there is no
    objective

45
The significant problems we face cannot be
solved by the same level of thinking which
created them.
Albert Einstein
46
Kano Model
Attractive
Unitary
Insufficient (not doing it)
Sufficient (do it a lot)
Expected
47
Force Field Analysis
Driving Forces
Restraining Forces
1 Alternative funding
Budget Cuts 10
Untrained Personnel 5
5 Sr. Management support
Today
Objective
Unclear Policies4
2 Communication
Employee Turnover 3
10 Safety of youth
(___________________________)
(___________________________)
48
Force Field Analysis
  • Draw two columns, with one header running across
    both.
  • Write the planned change in the header area.
  • Label the left column "driving forces", and the
    right one "restraining forces".
  • List the forces in the two columns.
  • Encourage creative but realistic thinking.
  • Forces seek equilibrium. To encourage change,
    create asymmetry between forces.
  • Which of the restraining forces can be removed or
    weakened?

49
Force Field Analysis
  • Draw two columns, with one header running across
    both.
  • Write the planned change in the header area.
  • Label the left column "driving forces", and the
    right one "restraining forces".
  • List the forces in the two columns.
  • Encourage creative but realistic thinking.
  • Forces seek equilibrium. To encourage change,
    create asymmetry between forces.
  • Which of the restraining forces can be removed or
    weakened?

Try It
50
Relationship Diagraph
  • Use to Understand Cause and effect relationships
  • Helps to prioritize and focus effort for the
    largest impact

51
Relationship Digraph
Don't want to change
Lack of Rewards
  • Communication

Fear
Training
Politics
Empowerment
Need resources
Lack of S.O.P.
No one accountable
Involve more people
52
  • Relationship Digraph Results

Causes
Effects
  • Don't want to change
  • Fear
  • Politics
  • Need resources
  • No one accountable
  • Involve more people
  • Lack of S.O.P.
  • Communication
  • Training
  • Rewards

53
  • Breakthroughs Often Focus On
  • Technology
  • Organization
  • Culture

and how they can impact process what's actually
done
54
  • Dynamics of Breakthrough Thinking
  • Issue The specific reason you need to
    reengineer the process. (High Cost)
  • Conclusion An aspect of the process
    contributing to the issue. (College Graduates
    must do the work)
  • Presumption A view or opinion about conditions
    that underlie the conclusion which lead to the
    issue. (The job requires elaborate analysis)

Breakthroughs can have a "domino effect"!
55
  • Breakthrough Idea Example
  • Old "Law" You need to go to college to get a
    degree.
  • Disruptive Idea The Internet
  • New "Law" The college will go to you.

What is the Disruptive Idea "domino effect"?
56
  • Breakthrough Idea Example
  • Old "Law" Employees need to commute to the
    office.
  • Disruptive Ideas Fax machines, distributed
    computing, telecommunication, multi-media
    conferences.
  • New "Law" Who needs to commute? Sell the
    office park!

What is the Disruptive Idea "domino effect"?
57
Morphological Box
  • This helps teams identify all practical
    alternatives for a solution.
  • It promotes divergent thinking.
  • It assists with convergent thinking.
  • It requires the input of experts.
  • It helps a team see how the potential
    alternatives fit.
  • It documents key steps, alternatives for each
    step and the chosen path.

58
Morphological Box
59
Morphological Box
60
Morphological Box
  • With a 10 parameter by 10 option
  • Morphological Box
  • You can evaluate 10 billion combinations.
  • A brainstorming team generating 5 ideas per
    minute, working 24 hours a day, would take 3,800
    years to match this productivity!

61
Document Your Plan
  • The Goal
  • The Goal Leader
  • The Objective
  • The Objective Leader
  • The Task
  • The Sub-Task
  • The Timeframe
  • Track progress against the plan.

62
Review how to design an Implementation Plan
  • Keep the goal in mind
  • Identify stakeholders and involve them
  • Think through change management issues
  • Review the Objective in its relationship with the
    current situation (Force Field Analysis)
  • Think through driving and restraining forces
  • Explore cause and effect relationships
    (Interrelationship diagraph)
  • Be creative and look for breakthrough ideas
  • Think through alternatives (Morphological Box)
  • Plan and document an implementation process

63
Example
64
Goal Leader Beth Davis
Objective Leader John Criswell
Objective 40 Develop and implement performance
incentives to promote program accountability and
quality.
Objective Leader John Criswell
Objective 41 Implement evidence based programs
and services that are proven effective in
achieving program performance outcomes.
Objective Leader Jennifer Rechichi
65
Objective 41 Implementation Plan to Implement
evidence based programs and services that are
proven effective in achieving program performance
outcomes.
What would you do?
66
Objective 41 Implementation Plan to Implement
evidence based programs and services that are
proven effective in achieving program performance
outcomes.
67
Objective 41 Implementation Plan to Implement
evidence based programs and services that are
proven effective in achieving program performance
outcomes.
68
Objective 41 Implementation Plan to Implement
evidence based programs and services that are
proven effective in achieving program performance
outcomes.
69
Objective 41 Implementation Plan to Implement
evidence based programs and services that are
proven effective in achieving program performance
outcomes.
70
Use the Excel Spread Sheet
Track Progress
71
Implementation Timeline
Any Questions?
72
Help and consultation isa phone call away
  • Bob Dale
  • (850) 487-1213
  • Email robert.dale_at_djj.state.fl.us
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