National Religious Broadcasters Leadership and Management Course - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 83
About This Presentation
Title:

National Religious Broadcasters Leadership and Management Course

Description:

Providing translations of the Holy Scriptures that are faithful to the working ... Working in partnerships with all Christian churches and Christian communities. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 84
Provided by: rdalelef
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: National Religious Broadcasters Leadership and Management Course


1
National Religious BroadcastersLeadership and
Management Course
  • Finally! A Strategic Planning Model That
  • Works for Large and Small Organizations
  • And CEOs and Department Heads
  • Part I
  • Saturday, February 17, 2007
  • 200 PM 330 PM
  • R. Dale Lefever, Ph.D.
  • Partner, The Andringa Group
  • Ann Arbor, Michigan

2
Strategic PlanningUnderstanding the What,
Whyand How in Context
3
Strategic PlanningThe Traditional View
  • Columbus did not know where he was going when he
    left. When he got home, he did not know where he
    had been. And, he did it all on borrowed money.
    There is hope for all of us!

4
A Definition of Strategic Planning
  • The process by which the guiding members of an
    organization envision its future and develop the
    necessary procedures and operations to achieve
    that future . . . Envisioning involves a belief
    that aspects of the future can be influenced and
    changed by what one does now . . . that you can
    do more than plan for the future you can help
    the organization create its future. --
    Pfeiffer

5
Making StrategicPlanning Matter
  • Strategic planning cant have an impact if it
    doesnt drive decision-making. -- Mankins

6
Strategic PlanningThe Purposes
  • Strategic planning is an ongoing and dynamic
    process designed to
  • ? Ensure a consistent, clear purpose throughout
  • the organization
  • ? Provide a point of reference for all
  • management decisions

7
The Purposes (continued)
  • ? Gain commitment from those within the
  • organization by clearly communicating
  • the direction and priorities of the
  • organizations business
  • ? Achieve understanding and support from
  • those outside the organization who are
  • important to its success

8
Organizational Life CyclesPurposes, People and
Processes in Transition
  • Criteria for Organizational Effectiveness
  • ? External/Internal Focus
  • (Primary stakeholder needs versus
  • organization agenda)

9
Organizational Life Cycles(continued)
  • ? Flexibility/Control
  • (Innovation and adaptation versus
  • predictability and stability)
  • ? Ends/Means
  • (Effective goal accomplishment versus
  • efficient production of work)

10
The Strategic PlanningProcess
  • The key elements include
  • ? The articulation of the organizations vision
    and mission

11
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The articulation of the organizations vision
  • and mission
  • ? The identification of emerging trends

12
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The articulation of the organizations vision
  • and mission
  • ? The identification of emerging trends
  • ? The assessment of stakeholder expectations

13
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The assessment of stakeholder expectations
  • ? The selection of key results areas

14
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The assessment of stakeholder expectations
  • ? The selection of key results areas
  • ? The development of priority goals

15
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The assessment of stakeholder expectations
  • ? The selection of key results areas
  • ? The development of priority goals
  • ? The design of implementation strategies
  • and measures of success

16
The Strategic PlanningProcess (continued)
  • The key elements include
  • ? The design of implementation strategies
  • and measures of success
  • ? The documentation of achievement, the
  • monitoring of the plan and the refine-
  • ment of the process

17
Hierarchy of Planning
Question Where are goals generated?
(Issues)
(Why?)
Strategic (Purpose)
(Results)
(What?)
Management (Goals)
(Methods)
(How?)
Operational (Tasks)
18
The Clarificationof the Organizations
MissionConfirming the Central
Purpose,Critical Functions andCore Values
19
The Ultimate Challenge of Strategic Planning
  • Preserve a cherished core ideology (i.e.,
    mission) while simultaneously stimulating
    progress and change in everything that is not
    part of the core ideology.
  • -- Collins

20
Defining the Mission
  • Renewal is not just innovation and change. It
    is also the process of bringing the results of
    change into line with our purposes.
  • -- Gardner
  • A review of your organizations mission includes
  • ? A statement of your unique identity the
  • primary result you exist to achieve

21
Defining the Mission (continued)
  • ? A description of the basic functions you
    should
  • perform the businesses you should be in
  • ? A determination of your approach to
  • performing your functions the principles
  • and practices which should guide your
  • decisions

22
Example American Bible Society Mission
  • Mission
  • The primary reason the ABS exists is to
  • Make the Bible available to every person in a
    language and format each can understand and
    afford, so that all people may experience its
    life changing message.

23
Example (continued)
  • Critical Functions
  • In order to achieve its mission the ABS will
  • concentrate on its role as a Scripture
  • Advocate to advance the perception and
    reception of the Bibles relevance for every
    generation the goal is to increase awareness
    and acceptance of the authority of the Bible.
  • Provider create and deliver relevant
    Scripture resources and tools the goal is to
    develop the full capacity to compete in the
    digital world.

24
Example (continued)
  • Critical Functions
  • In order to achieve its mission the ABS will
  • concentrate on its role as a Scripture
  • Partner value, equip and collaborate with
    others to achieve mission impact the goal is to
    select and cultivate an integrated community
    proactive in advancing the Bible cause.

25
Example (continued)
  • Core Values
  • The performance of the ABS will be guided by a
  • commitment to
  • Affirming the power of God to speak to every
    generation through the Holy Scriptures.
  • Providing translations of the Holy Scriptures
    that are faithful to the working of the original
    language biblical texts.
  • Working in partnerships with all Christian
    churches and Christian communities.

26
Example (continued)
  • Core Values
  • The performance of the ABS will be guided by a
  • commitment to
  • Producing materials that avoid endorsing any
    doctrinal
  • positions.
  • Utilizing appropriate communication tools
    that allow the Word
  • of God to come alive in individual and public
    life.

27
Example Federal District Court Mission
  • Mission
  • The primary reason the Federal District Court
    exists, in accordance with applicable laws, is
    to
  • Preserve the rule of law, protect individual
    rights and liberties and promote public trust and
    confidence by resolving disputes and issues of
    controversy in a fair, timely and economical
    manner.

28
Example (continued)
  • Critical Functions
  • In fulfillment of its purpose, the Federal
    District
  • Court will excel in
  • Dispute resolution (includes adjudication and
    sentencing)
  • Case management (includes scheduling and
    noticing)
  • Records management, preservation and
    availability
  • Jury management
  • Pre and post-supervision of defendants
  • Public education and information
  • Court and staff administration

29
Example (continued)
  • Core Values
  • The above functions, performed in support of the
  • Federal District Courts purpose, will be done
    with
  • a commitment to
  • Protection against bias and discrimination
  • Professional competence and behavior
  • Principled decision-making
  • Procedural simplicity and consistency

30
Example (continued)
  • Core Values
  • The above functions, performed in support of the
  • Federal District Courts purpose, will be done
    with
  • a commitment to
  • Independence of the judiciary
  • Promptness
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Reasonable access for all

31
Sample Mission Statements
  • Vector Health
  • Mission (old) To provide surgery, treatment
    and therapy for people who have sustained
    injuries to their hands.
  • Mission (new) To give people back the use of
    their hands.

32
Sample Mission Statements(continued)
  • The Hearing Society
  • Mission To help those with hearing loss
    reconnect with their world.
  • Science Museum of Minnesota
  • Mission To help people touch the future,
  • hands-on.

33
Sample Mission Statements(continued)
  • Family Medicine Practice
  • Mission To improve the health and quality
  • of life of individuals in the context of their
  • families and the communities in which
  • they live.

34
The Irrevocable FutureTracking the Changing
Natureof the Status Quo
35
The Dilemma
  • Life can only be understood backward but it
    must be lived forward.
  • -- Kierkegaard

36
The Future That HasAlready Happened
  • In human affairs political, social, economic,
    and business it is pointless to try to predict
    the future, let alone attempt to look ahead 75
    years. But it is possible and fruitful to
    identify major events that have already happened,
    irrevocably, and that therefore will have pre-
    dictable effects in the next decade or two. It
    is possible, in other words, to identify and
    prepare for the future that has already
    happened.
  • -- Drucker

37
Strategic Planning in Perspective
  • At the outset, let me say that futurists do not
    predict the future. And theres good reason for
    this. If we could predict the future, it would
    mean that the future could not be changed. We
    could not consciously create it. Yet this is the
    main purpose of studying the future to look at
    what may happen if present trends continue,
    decide if this is what is desirable, and, if its
    not, work to change it.
  • -- Cornish

38
Trend AnalysisSome Definitions
  • Trends
  • A pattern of change over time in something of
    importance for the observer
  • Issue
  • A trend receiving sufficient attention to
    require
  • an action to be taken

39
Trend Analysis (continued)
  • Scenarios
  • Compilation of trends that present different
  • images of the future
  • -- Institute for
  • Alternative Futures

40
Stakeholder Analysis
  • The single most important thing to remember
    about any enterprise is that there are no results
    inside its walls. The result of a business is a
    satisfied customer. The result of a hospital is
    a healed patient. The result of a school is a
    student who has learned something and puts it to
    work ten years later. Inside an enterprise,
    there are only cost centers. Results exist only
    on the outside.
  • -- Drucker

41
Stakeholder Analysis (continued)
  • In conducting a stakeholder analysis it must be
  • determined
  • ? Who the key stakeholders are (i.e., the
    primary
  • groups who use or provide the organizations
  • services, or influence its activities)
  • ? What the stakeholders will expect more or less
  • of in response to their changing needs
  • ? How the stakeholders will evaluate performance
    (i.e.,
  • the criteria they will use to measure an
    organiza-
  • tions responsiveness to their needs)

42
Stakeholder Analysis Matrix
Current Stake- holders
New Stake- holders
Current Services
New Services
43
Stakeholder Analysis(Continued)
  • The criteria for measuring results using each
    strategy involves quantity, quality, timeliness
    and cost.
  • The degree of risk increases as you move through
    the Z model of possible strategies.

44
Strategic Issues
  • Strategic issues are fundamental policy
    questions or critical challenges affecting the
    organizations mandates, mission, functions and
    value. They are derived from a clear
    understanding of where and how emerging trends
    and the changing expectations of stakeholders
    will impact the organization.
  • -- Bryson

45
National Religious BroadcastersLeadership and
Management Course
  • Finally! A Strategic Planning Model That
  • Works for Large and Small Organizations
  • And CEOs and Department Heads
  • Part II
  • Saturday, February 17, 2007
  • 345 PM 515 PM
  • R. Dale Lefever, Ph.D.
  • Partner, The Andringa Group
  • Ann Arbor, Michigan

46
The Key Results AreasDeciding Where We
CannotAfford to Fail
47
The Choice
  • Your options dont include the status quo. You
    can either change or be changed.

48
A Perspective onExcellence
  • It is no use saying we are doing our best.
    You have got to succeed in doing what is
    necessary.
  • -- Churchill

49
The Shape of the Future
  • You really are free, and as truly free people
    are, you really are responsible. Fail to build
    your own future, and someone is going to build
    one for you, whether you want it or not. Fail to
    bind all the disparately emerging futures within
    your organization to a shared set of goals, and
    its future will be forfeit, too.
  • -- Wacker and Taylor

50
Selecting Key Results Areas
  • The question is not How will next year be
    different?, but rather, what must we do
    differently next year to get closer to our
    strategic intent.
  • -- Pfeiffer
  • A key results area is an area of organizational
    behavior where superior performance will produce
    outstanding results in terms of benefits to the
    stakeholders.

51
The Intellectual ChallengeChoosing the Genius
of the And Over the Tyranny of the Or
52
The Ultimate Challenge of Strategic Planning
  • Preserve a cherished core ideology (i.e.,
    mission) while simultaneously stimulating
    progress and change in everything that is not
    part of the core ideology.
  • -- Collins

53
The Ultimate Challenge (continued)
  • The test of a first-rate intelligence is the
    ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at
    the same time, and still retain the ability to
    function.
  • -- Fitzgerald

54
Some Thoughts On Thinking
  • A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives
    it the superficial appearance of being right.
  • It is not what we know that causes us problems,
    but what we know that aint so.
  • Daring as it is to question the unknown, even
    more so to question the known.

55
Perspective
  • Organizations have blindness to their defects.
    They are suffering not because they are unable to
    resolve their problems, but because they cant
    see them.
  • -- Gardner

56
Perspective (continued)
  • The significant problems we face cannot be
    solved at the same level of thinking we were at
    when we first created them.
  • -- Einstein
  • Insanity is doing the same thing over and over
    again and expecting different results. --
    Einstein

57
The Status of Sacred Cows
  • The only sacred cow in an organization should be
    its core values. If an organization is to meet
    the challenges of a changing world, it must be
    prepared to change everything about itself except
    its basic beliefs.
  • -- Collins
  • Sacred cows make the best burgers.
  • -- Kreigel

58
The Development of Priority Goals and Measures of
SuccessSearching for the BHAGs
59
Strategic Goal SettingThe Search for the
BHAGs(big, hairy, audacious goals)
  • Intentions are fine and good, but it is the
    translation of those intentions into concrete
    items mechanisms with teeth that can make the
    difference between a visionary organization or
    forever remaining a wannabe.
  • -- Collins/Porras

60
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements

61
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements
  • ? They challenge the status quo

62
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements
  • ? They challenge the status quo
  • ? They require little or no explanation

63
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements
  • ? They challenge the status quo
  • ? They require little or no explanation
  • ? They are consistent with the vision and
  • mission

64
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements
  • ? They challenge the status quo
  • ? They require little or no explanation
  • ? They are consistent with the vision and
  • mission
  • ? They are measurable

65
Strategic Goal Setting(continued)
  • Characteristics of BHAGs
  • ? They are goals, not statements
  • ? They challenge the status quo
  • ? They require little or no explanation
  • ? They are consistent with the vision and
  • mission
  • ? They are measurable
  • ? They are elevating

66
The Performance AuditAnalyzing Your
Organizations Current Capability and Support
for the BHAGs
67
The Fundamental Roleof Leadership
  • Leadership is bridging the gap between the
    organizations goals and its current
    capabilities.
  • -- Kotter

68
Conducting the SWOT AnalysisAn Honest
Assessment of Current Capabilities
  • The development of organizational capabilities
    is, at least in part, the result of dynamic
    dialogue between the organization and its
    environment.
  • -- Drucker

69
The Decision Matrix for Eval-uating Support for
Priority Goals
  • Internal
    Capability
  • High
    Medium Low

External Acceptability Low Medium
High
70
The Translation of Ideas Into RealityDesigning
Strategiesfor Implementation
71
The Sobering Reality
  • Nine out of ten organizations fail to completely
    implement their strategic plan.
  • -- Fortune
  • Magazine
    2001

72
Managing the Transition
  • There are few things sadder for an organization
    than an exciting vision poorly implemented.
  • -- Nanus
  • Every innovation is a failure in the middle. By
    definition, they have never been tried before (at
    least by the organization), and success can be
    determined only after they are implemented.
  • -- Kanter

73
What Really Works
  • ? Devise and maintain a clearly stated, focused
    strategy

74
What Really Works
  • ? Devise and maintain a clearly stated, focused
  • strategy
  • ? Develop and maintain flawless operational
    execution

75
What Really Works
  • ? Devise and maintain a clearly stated, focused
  • strategy
  • ? Develop and maintain flawless operational
    execution
  • ? Develop and maintain a performance-oriented
    culture

76
What Really Works
  • ? Devise and maintain a clearly stated, focused
  • strategy
  • ? Develop and maintain flawless operational
    execution
  • ? Develop and maintain a performance-oriented
    culture
  • ? Build and maintain a fast, flexible and flat
    organization structure
  • -- Nohria, Joyce
    and Roberson

77
Evaluation and MonitoringCommitting to a
RaceWithout a Finish Line
78
The End of the Beginning
  • This is not the end. It is not even the
    beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the
    end of the beginning.
  • -- Churchill

79
Monitoring the Process
  • Strategic planning is an ongoing process which
    requires management to
  • ? Focus on results, not activities compare
  • actual to intended (and unintended)
  • outcomes
  • ? Keep the purpose firm and the plan flexible
  • ? Communicate and celebrate meaningful
  • achievements on a routine basis

80
Monitoring the Process(Continued)
  • ? Demonstrate their commitment to the
  • process and the use of the plan in key
  • management decisions
  • ? Test the assumptions underlying the plan and
  • to track the trends

81
Summary
82
Choosing A Future
  • Think in anticipation, today for tomorrow, and
    indeed, for many days. The greatest providence
    is to have forethought for what comes. What is
    provided for does not happen by chance, nor is
    the man who is prepared ever beset by
    emergencies. One must not, therefore, postpone
    consideration till the need arises.
    Consideration should go beforehand. You can,
    after careful reflection, act to prevent the most
    calamitous events.

83
Contact InformationR. Dale Lefever,
Ph.D.Management Consultant1246 Laurel View
DriveAnn Arbor, Michigan 48105Telephone
734.615.2688Fax 734.615.2687Email
dlefever_at_umich.edu
rdl
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com