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Planning as the Organization of Hope

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Title: Planning as the Organization of Hope


1
Southern Polytechnic State University

Planning The Organization of Hope Dr.
Robert A. Sevier Senior Vice President Stamats,
Inc. Cedar Rapids, IA 52406 (800)
553-8878 bob.sevier_at_stamats.com
2
About Stamats
  • We are an award-winning, nationally-recognized
    higher education research, planning, and
    marketing communications company. Our mission is
    to help college and university leaders achieve
    their most important marketing, recruiting, and
    fundraising goals through the creation of
    customized integrated marketing solutions.
  • Research, Planning, and Consulting Services
  • Image and competitive positioning studies
  • Tuition price elasticity studies
  • Alumni and donor studies
  • Marketing communication audits
  • Recruiting audits
  • Campus visit audits
  • Integrated marketing plans
  • Brand clarification and communication plans
  • Recruiting plans
  • Strategy development and strategic plans
  • Board presentations
  • Project-specific consulting
  • Creative Services
  • Recruiting and fundraising publications
  • Web site development
  • Virtual tours
  • Direct marketing strategies (search, annual fund)
  • Targeted e-mail marketing systems
  • Advertising
  • Creative concepting
  • Content management systems
  • Dynamic news and events calendars
  • Message boards/chats

Offices Cambridge, Richmond, Portland (OR),
San Francisco, and Cedar Rapids
3
My Goals for This Session
  • Explore the idea of planning
  • Discuss four basic types of flawed plans
  • Present a series of keys for making your next
    plan a success

4
Some Key Questions
  • Why do we plan?
  • What are some problems with higher educations
    approach to planning?
  • What are the hallmarks of a good planning
    experience?

5
The Most Important Things
  • Planning is a formalized attitude
  • Its not the plan that counts, but what you do
    with the plan
  • The core concept of planning is to probe and
    explore and identify opportunities to help you
    achieve your vision
  • As soon as the first shot is fired, the (battle)
    plan begins to unwind
  • A dexterous planning process is more important
    than any plan

6
What Is Planning?
  • John Bryson Planning is a disciplined effort to
    produce fundamental decisions and actions that
    shape and guide what an organization is, what it
    does, and why it does it
  • Michael Dolence et al. Planning helps an
    organization identify and maintain an optimal
    alignment with the most important elements of its
    environment
  • Leonard Goodstein et al. Planning is the process
    by which the guiding members of an organization
    envision its future and develop the necessary
    procedures and operations to achieve that future
  • Philip Kotler and Patrick Murphy Planning is the
    process of developing and maintaining a strategic
    fit between the organization and its changing
    market opportunities

7
Planning - continued
  • Planning is the organization of hope

Stephen Blum
8
Types of Plans
Our focus
  • Strategic plans
  • Integrated marketing plans
  • Integrated marketing communications plans

9
Essential Elements of Strategy
  • The process is strategic because it involves
    choosing how best to respond to the circumstances
    of a dynamic and sometimes hostile environment
  • Colleges and universities have many choices in
    the face of changing stakeholder needs, funding
    availability, competition, and other factors
  • Being strategic requires recognizing these
    choices and committing to one set of responses
    instead of another
  • Strategic thinking and planning is systematic in
    that it calls for following a process that is
    both focused and productive
  • The process raises a sequence of questions which
    helps planners and internal stakeholders examine
    past experiences, test old assumptions, gather
    and incorporate new information about the
    present, and anticipate the environment in which
    the organization will be working in the future

10
Elements continued
  • Strategic thinking involves choosing specific
    priorities making decisions about ends and
    means, in both the long term and the short term
  • Strategic thinking is about building commitment
  • Systematically engaging key stakeholders in the
    process of identifying priorities allows
    disagreements to be engaged constructively and
    supports better communication and coordination
  • The process allows a broad consensus to be built,
    resulting in enhanced accountability throughout
    the organization
  •  

11
Basic Planning Fallacies
  • Planning is a science
  • You can predict the future
  • Consensus is achievable
  • There are perfect solutions
  • There is a perfect time
  • Alphas have all the answers
  • You know what your competitors are going to do

12
The Domains of Planning in Higher Education
  • A strategic planning domain is a key (and
    existing) institutional process or activity
  • Most plans are executed through the coordination
    of the following
  • Academic affairs
  • Recruiting and financial aid
  • Advancement and alumni relations (fundraising)
  • Facilities and IT
  • Student development/retention
  • Brand marketing and image
  • Finance
  • Human resources

13
Everybody Pulling in the Same Direction
The Plan
Academic Affairs
Recruiting/Financial Aid
Advancement
Facilities IT
Student Development
Brand Marketing
Finance
HR
14
Three Types of Plans to Avoid
15
The Business as Usual Plan
  • The business as usual plan demonstrates little
    objective rethinking of institutional mission,
    goals, or strategies, but instead relies on
    extrapolating the institutions past into its
    future
  • The implied message is lets just keep doing
    what weve been doing
  • Such plans evidence little rigorous analysis or
    creativity
  • Stretch goals are notably absent, as are
    objective assessments of opportunities for
    improvement
  • The institution simply wants to tread water
    under the assumption that things are good now,
    so why change

16
The Wish List Plan
  • The wish list plan sets forth a veritable
    laundry list of new initiatives for the
    institution to pursue, tied to advancing a
    far-reaching set of strategic objectives
  • Participants in the planning process have been
    asked to blue sky the institutions future,
    typically responding to queries such as What
    would we do if we were suddenly given 100
    million dollars by a generous donor?
  • The result is too often a non-prioritized
    catalogue of unrelated initiatives, reflecting
    little institutional consensus and determination
    of how such initiatives are to be funded

17
The Perfect Plan
  • There is no such thing as a perfect plan
  • Getting to perfect costs too much, takes too
    long, and expends too much political capital
  • In addition, perfect plans require a perfect
    understanding of the marketplace, our
    competitors, and the future
  • Instead of perfect, go for pretty good in a
    timely fashion

18
Keep in Mind
  • I would rather go into battle with a good plan
    today than a perfect plan tomorrow General
    George S. Patton

19
The Platte River Approach to Planning
  • David Leslie and E. K. Fretwell, in Wise Moves in
    Hard Times, remind us that planning has been used
    as a euphemism for indiscriminate expansiveness
  • The idea of more
  • Mission creep
  • Mission climb
  • The result of this expansionism on most campuses
    is a barely sustainable mix of marginal to
    average programs, expensive facilities, and large
    faculties
  • There are no signature programs
  • Nothing that captures the attention of the
    marketplace
  • Nothing with any Wow!
  • A mile wide but only an inch deep

20
Concerns About Planning
  • Fear of hard decisions. Colleges and universities
    are highly charged political environments in
    which no one is shy about expressing dismay.
    Hard, unpopular decisions can wreak havoc, so
    leaders avoid making them
  • Fuzzy, unmeasurable goals. One state system wants
    to foster collaboration between units
  • A major private university wants to be the
    leader in the integration of teaching and
    research. A comprehensive university stakes its
    future on increasing access to knowledge
    resources
  • The all things to all people syndrome. A large
    public university that seeks to become one of the
    top 10 publics
  • Institutions such as this are fond of saying that
    they cant be all things to all people, but then
    they set out to prove otherwise
  • This one wanted to elevate our faculty and its
    teaching, research, and scholarship and
    globalize the university community

21
Keep in Mind
To fight fear, act. To increase fear, wait, put
off, postpone David Joseph Schwartz
22
The Most Important Planning Element
  • It begins with focus

The future does not belong to Coleman lanterns
Rather, it belongs to MAG-lites
23
Focus on
  • A target geography
  • A certain kind of student
  • A certain way of teaching
  • A certain discipline

24
Keep in Mind
A dog that chases a hundred rabbits goes home
hungry. A dog that chases one rabbit goes home
with a rabbit
25
The Idea of Being Audacious
  • Three levels of thinking
  • Predictable
  • Surprising
  • Courageous (I call this one audacious)

26
Audacious - continued
  • The decision of Trenton State to downsize its
    enrollment by one-third and eliminate many
    graduate programs so it could energize its
    commitment to undergraduate education is a
    galvanizing decision
  • Equally galvanizing was the decision by Northeast
    Missouri State University to become Truman State
    or Southwestern at Memphis to become Rhodes
    College
  •  
  • The decision by Indiana Wesleyan University to
    jump feet-first into distance and off-site
    education created a sense of excitement (not to
    mention possibilities) on that campus

27
The Leaders Role in Planning
  • Provide vision and direction
  • Prioritize fewer better goals
  • Provide resources
  • Manage from 32,000 feet but bring the fruits of
    planning down to the trenches
  • Hold people accountable

28
The Followers Role in Planning
  • Execute the plan
  • Types of followers
  • Pragmatic followers
  • Alienated followers
  • Comformist
  • Passive followers
  • Exceptional followers

Q What kind of follower are you?
29
Keys to Successful Planning
  • Recognize the basic fallacies of planning
  • Keep it simple
  • It begins with vision (the puzzle box top)
  • Identify strategic issues
  • Watch those paradigms
  • Its not SWOT, but OTSW
  • You need great data (without it, its only an
    opinion)
  • Herd the elephants
  • Beware the dangers of consensus management
  • Dont forget the pareto principle
  • Use a pay-off matrix
  • Without cash its only a wish
  • Its all about execution

30
Keep it Simple
  • Get your ego out of the situation. Good judgment
    is based on reality. The more you screen things
    through your ego, the farther you get from
    reality
  • Avoid wishful thinking. We all want things to go
    a certain way. But how things go are often out of
    our control. Good common sense tends to be in
    tune with the way things are going
  • Youve got to be better at listening. Common
    sense by
  • definition is based on what others think.
    Its thinking that is
  • common to many. People who dont have their
    ears to the
  • ground lose access to important common
    sense

31
It Begins With Vision
  • A vision is a realistic, credible, attractive
    future for your organization Nanus
  •  
  • A vision is a combination of gut values and a
    tangible goal Keller
  • Gut values need to be the ones that are part of
    the colleges tradition and to which at least a
    large minority on campus already subscribe
  • If the values articulated in a vision are too
    idealistic or vague the vision will be treated
    cynically  
  •  
  • The northbound train
  • Conveys an unwavering commitment to a
  • particular direction

32
Qualities of a Good Vision
  • The right vision for a college or university
    should be
  • Future-oriented
  • Utopianclearly offering a better future for the
    organization
  • Appropriateconsistent with mission, history,
    values, and culture
  • Reflecting high ideals and standards of
    excellence
  • Clear in purpose and direction
  • Able to inspire enthusiasm and encourage
    commitment
  • Ambitious

33
Identify Your Strategic Issues
  • The identification of strategic issues
  • Focus on issues and not answers
  • Creates the tension needed to prompt
    organizational change
  • Should provide useful clues about how to resolve
    the issue
  • Allows insight into possible ways that the issue
    might be resolved
  • If the planning process has not been real up
    until this point, it will become real now
  • The planning process will begin to seem less
    academic and more meaningful

34
A Lesson from Steven Covey
Circle of Concern
Circle of Influence
Things you really cant do anything about
Things you can change
35
The Problem With Paradigms
  • The tyranny of our traditions
  • Or what I learned from Thomas Lawton

36
SWOT or OTSW
  • Whats wrong with SWOT?
  • Inside vs. outside
  • Problems and opportunities
  • Data, data, data, you cant make bricks without
    clay Sherlock Holmes

37
Keep in Mind
Chances are your main threat is behind you
38
Herd the Elephants
  • Remember the TV commercial for alcoholism
    awareness that featured an elephant in a familys
    living room
  • Everyone in the family acted as if the elephant
    was not there
  • The idea was that alcoholism in a family is like
    an elephant in the roomeverybody knows its
    there, but they all pretend it doesnt exist
  • On numerous occasions while working with colleges
    and universities I have found myself involved in
    planning projects that didnt want to recognize
    one or more elephants in the room
  • Now, I often open planning sessions by asking if
    there are any elephants in the room?
  • My goal is to help clients get the elephants out
    in the open as quickly as possible
  • And as with any problem, acknowledging it is
    often the first step toward dealing with it
  •  

39
Beware the Dangers of Consensus Management

What are the odds of everyone agreeing
on a course of action?


No Perhaps
Possibly Yes

40
Pareto Principle
  • In any series of elements to be controlled, a
    selected small fraction in terms of number of
    elements almost always accounts for a large
    fraction in terms of effect
  •  
  • What?
  • In laymans terms, Pareto discovered that about
    80 percent of the wealth of most countries was
    controlled by a consistent minority of people
    typically about 20 percent. He called this a
    predictable imbalance
  • We call it the 80/20 rule
  • The key is Joseph M. Jurans vital few and
    trivial many
  • Juran suggests that when we all have too little
    time, talent, and money, we must spend more time
    truly focusing on the 20 percent (the vital few)
    rather than the 80 percent (the trivial many)

41
Pay Off Matrix
42
Without Cash Its Only a Wish
  • Talk is cheap
  • Commitment is spelled with a
  • Dont ever begin a planning process without a
    sense of the available dollars
  • Dont start something you cant sustain

43
Its All About Execution
  • Just do it
  • W3
  • Who
  • Does What
  • When
  • No snowflake

44
Hustle as Strategy
45
Keep in Mind
You cant build a reputation on what you are
going to do
46
Think plan. Plan and do. Do and leave undone.
47
Resources
  • Beckwith Selling the Invisible
  • Bossidy Execution
  • Bryson Strategic Planning for Public and
    Nonprofit Organizations
  • Goodstein Applied Strategic Planning
  • Harari Leapfrogging the Competition
  • Kotter Leading Change
  • Kriegel Sacred Cows Make the Best Burgers
  • Leslie Wise Moves in Hard Times
  • Nanus Visionary Leadership
  • Sevier Strategic Planning Theory and Practice
  • Trout The Power of Simplicity
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