Strategic Planning: What is your Businesses Reason for Existence?
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to Articles@BusinessSystemsManager.com.
Title: Strategic Planning: What is your Businesses Reason for Existence?
Word Count: 724
Author: Justin Woolich
Email: Articles@BusinessSystemsManager.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=6277
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Strategic Planning: What is your Businesses Reason for Existence?
Copyright 2006 www.BusinessSystemsManager.com
As business owners and managers we are quite often caught
up in the day to day work of running our businesses,
dealing with clients, managing staff, developing new
products and more often than not putting out fires. After
all of this “work” is done there is no time left (or more
importantly no energy left) to spend on what I consider to
be the most important work that we face as business owners
and managers, Business Development.
It is no wonder that the average business struggles to
reach the size, profitability and success that urged the
founder to start it in the first place.
What can you do to ensure that your business remains
focused?
A Strategic Plan will guide your business, assist you with
important decisions and keep you and your employees on
track. It will identify your businesses reason for
existence and define exactly what success means in your
business world. Most importantly it will guide you and your
employees along the path to business success.
You need to compile your Strategic Plan into a document. It
is simply not good enough to state that it is stored in
your head. You will find that once you have committed it to
paper (or electronically) you and your business will start
rapidly moving towards the goals you have identified in
your Stragtegic Planning Document.
What do you put into a Strategic Planning Document?
- Be concise and to the point, you do not want to produce
something that is difficult to read and update and
irrelevant by the time it is completed.
- Include a statement on your vision for your company at
the beginning of the document. This sets the tone for what
is to follow.
- State exactly what it is that you are trying to achieve
with your business. What is your Businesses Reason for
Existence?
- Put this vision in terms of the problems that you solve
for your clients. Always think in terms of your clients
perspective because at the end of the day that is the only
perspective that is really important to your businesses
success.
-Identify the key Goals that your business needs to achieve
to be successful. Define how you will know when you have
reached the goals by associating a measurable rage of
values with the goal i.e. Key Indicators
- Put a Specific Date on when each of goals will be
achieved and Regularly Measure your progress towards
reaching them.
Some examples of business goals include:
Financial Profitability Figures Company Growth Market
Acceptance and Penetration Customer Satisfaction. New
Product Innovation
What do you do with your Strategic Plan when you have
finished it?
- Treat your Strategic Plan as a work in progress, business
environments change rapidly, be prepared to alter your
direction in response to customer, operational and
competitive changes.
- Make sure you schedule a regular review and updating of
the Strategic Plan. Even if your goals remain the same,
regular review will commit the plan to your subconscious
ensuring that you are always moving towards your goals.
- Use the Strategic Plan to help you make decisions in your
business. Ask yourself “Will my decision move me closer to
or further away from the goals in my Strategic Plan?”. If
the decision moves you away from your goals then you should
either not move ahead with the decision or you need to
re-evaluate your Strategic Plan.
- Share the contents of your Strategic Plan with your
staff. You may not want to disclose all of the business
goals, but it is vitally important to communicate your
vision and relevant goals with your employees.
How does a Strategic Plan differ from a Business Plan?
A business plan is a more formalized in depth document and
generally takes months to develop. The problem with
Business Plans is that they tend to make many (often
invalid) assumptions and they are generally obsolete by the
time they are finished. Business Plans, once produced, are
rarely reviewed and updated.
A Strategic Plan is a working vision of where you are
taking your business. When regularly reviewed and updated
it remains relevant and aligned with your business.
There is not one thing that you could do immediately, right
now in your business that will have as much positive long
lasting impact as developing your Strategic Plan. Do it
now, can you afford not to?
About the Author:
Business System Manager Software assists you to develop a
Strategic Planning Document. Start a Free Trial Today
www.BusinessSystemsManager.com Justin Woolich has
been involved with the Development of Innovative Business
Software for over 12 years. He is passionate about
assisting Businesses with Software for Business
Development.
www.BusinessSystemsManager.com/AboutJustinWoolich.asp
x
|