How to Create a Strategic
Plan
Not to oversimplify how to create a strategic
plan, but by placing all the parts of a plan into three areas,
you can clearly see how the pieces fit together. The three pieces
of the puzzle are
- Where are we now?
- Where are we going?
- How will we get there?
Each part has certain elements to show
you how and where things fit it. For a visual on
Where are we now?
As you think about where your organization
is now, you want to look at your foundational elements (mission
and value) to make sure there has not been a change. More than
likely, you will not revise these two areas very often. Then
you want to look at your current position or your strategic
position. This is where you look at what is happening internally
and externally to determine how you need to shift and change
You should review your strategic position regularly through
the use of a SWOT. These elements are as follows:
- Mission statement: The mission describes your organization’s
purpose — the purpose for which you were founded and
why you exist. Some mission statements include the business
of the organization. Others explain what products or services
they produce or customers they serve. Does your mission statement
say what you do? Why does your organization exist?
- Values and/or guiding principles: This clarifies what you
stand for and believe in. Values guide the organization in
its daily business. What are the core values and beliefs of
your company? What values and beliefs guide your daily interactions?
What are you and your people really committed to?
- SWOT: SWOT is an acronym that stand for strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities, and threats. These elements are crucial in
assessing your strategic position with your organization.
You want to build on your company’s strengths; shore
up the weaknesses; capitalize on the opportunities; and recognize
the threats.
Where are we going?
The elements of the question Where are
we going? help you answer other questions such as What will
my organization look like in the future? Where are we headed?
What is the future I want to create for my company? Because
the future is hard to predict, you can have fun imagining what
it may look like. The following elements help you define the
future for your business:
- Sustainable competitive advantage: Sustainable competitive
advantage explains what your are best at compared to your
competitors. Each company strives to create an advantage that
continues to be competitive over the time. What can you be
best at? What is your uniqueness? What can your organization
potentially do better than any other organization?
- Vision statement: Your vision is formulating a picture of
what your organization’s future makeup will be and where
the organization is headed. What will your organization look
like in 5 to 10 years from now?
How will we get there?
Knowing how you’ll reach your vision
is the meat of your strategic plan, but it’s also the
most time consuming. The reason it takes so much time to develop
is because there are a number of routes from your current position
to your vision. Picking the right one determines how quickly
or slowly you get to your final destination.
The parts of your plan that layout your roadmap are listed below:
- Strategic objectives: Strategic objectives are long-term,
continuous strategic areas that help you connect your mission
to your vision. Holistic objectives encompass four areas:
financial, customer, operational, and people. What are the
key activities that you need to perform in order to achieve
your vision?
- Strategy: Strategy establishes a way to match your organization’s
strengths with market opportunities so that your organization
comes to mind when your customer has a need. This section
explains how you travel to your final destination. Does your
strategy match your strengths in a way that provides value
to your customers? Does it build an organizational reputation
and recognizable industry position?
- Short-term goals/priorities/initiatives: Short-term goals
convert your the strategic objectives into specific performance
targets. You can use goals, priorities, initiatives interchangeably.
In this book, I use goals to define short-term action. Effective
goals clearly state what you want to accomplish, when you
want to accomplish it, how you’re going to do it, and
who’s going to be responsible. Each goal should be specific
and measurable. What are the 1- to 3-year-goals you’re
trying to achieve to reach your vision? What are your specific,
measurable, and realistic targets of accomplishment?
- Action items: Action items are plans that set specific
actions that lead to implementing your goals. They include
start and end dates and appointing a person responsible Are
your action items comprehensive enough to achieve your goals?
- Scorecard: A scorecard measures and manages your strategic
plan. What are the key performance indicators you need to
track to monitor whether you’re achieving your mission?
Pick 5 to 10 goal related measures you can use to track the
progress of your plan and plug them into your scorecard.
- Execution: In executing the plan, identify issues that surround
who manages and monitors the plan and how the plan is communicated
and supported. How committed are you to implementing the plan
to move your organization forward? Will you commit money,
resources, and time to support the plan.
Use our
plan