Title: Strategic Planning Process in Local Government
1Strategic Planning Process in Local Government
- A comparative analysis by
- N. Nyathi and D. Korver
2BACKGROUND TO SNVs involvement
- Organisational Analysis Mat South RDCs
(2001-2002) - Joint Analysis of OA with 5 RDCs (2002)
- Priority listing of issues for capacity
development (2002-2003) - URDC, IRDC, BMRDC Strategic Planning Priority 1
- SNV development of strategic planning process for
local government in Zimbabwe
3What is Strategic Planning?
- It is a disciplined effort to produce fundamental
decisions and actions that shape and guide what
an organisation is and what it does and why it
does it (Bryson 1995)
4What does Strategic Planning do?
- Focusses on achievement of the best fit between
an organisation and its environment - Encourages a participative process to development
that is medium term , innovative and flexible to
meet strategic objectives in line with available
resources
5Characteristics of Strategic planning
- cross sectoral coordination and integration
- Financial feasibility
- Agreement on roles of public private sector in
development - Enabling role of public sector in support of
private sector - Linkage to and from national policy issues
- Regular monitoring and evaluation
- Source UNDP Global Report 1996
6Major assumption about Strategic Planning
- The major assumption of strategic planning is
that an organisation must be responsive to a
dynamic, changing environment, it emphasises the
organisations need to understand the changing
environment and to develop organisational
decisions responsive to those changes.
7Strategic Planning Process
- This can be split into 4 broad phases i.e.
- 1.Environmental scanning
- Internal External
- 2. Strategy Formulation
- 3. Strategy Implementation
- 4. Monitoring and control
- Many organisations break these further down into
manageable processes as shown below
8The Process
- Prepare
- Define
- Shared Values
- Shared Vision
- Mission
- Scan
- Environmental Scan (OT)
- Internal Audit (SW)
- Formulate
- Set Strategic Goals
- Set Areas of Key Results
- Set Key Result Objectives
- Action Planning
- Sub Unit Integration
- Implement
- Monitor
9The Process - Timetable
- Prepare (8 weeks)
- Define (4 weeks)
- Shared Values 2 weeks
- Shared Vision 1 week
- Mission 1 week
- Scan (16 weeks)
- Environmental Scan (OT) 8 weeks
- Internal Audit (SW) 8 weeks
- Formulate (24 weeks)
- Set Strategic Goals 4 weeks
- Set Areas of Key Results 4 weeks
- Set Key Result Objectives 4 weeks
- Action Planning 4 weeks
- Sub Unit Integration 8 weeks
- Implement (depends on plan)
- Monitor (ongoing)
- TOTAL 52 weeks
10Summary on Strategic Planning
- Strategic
- Goals values
Scanning the environment - where we want to go
what the world is like - Policies
Strategies - How we
intend to get there -
Targets - (milestones
along the way) - Operational
- Activity Planning
- Performance Standards
Appraisal - (inputs, outputs, outcomes)
(Annual reviews, audits) -
Monitoring (Resource and service plan monitoring)
11What makes SP unique in Zimbabwe?
- Economic hardships for RDCs
- Limited financial resources
- Limited time
- Other priorities e.g. food distribution
- Decentralisation Policy GoZ
- Clear requests from Min of LG regarding need for
strategic planning for local authorities - Political environment
12Benefits for local governments
- Strategic (long term) Thinking by staff and
councillors - Community involvement
- Improved relationships Councilors-Staff
- Ability to get buy-in from stakeholders in region
- Improved Coordination of NGO activities
- Compliance with GoZ regulations
13GoZ involvement, pros and cons
- Positive
- Local authorities have a platform to learn from
each other - Healthy competition (who has the first/best plan)
- Becomes a legitimate process, councils willing to
cooperate
- Negative
- Less ownership felt (is something that has to be
done for Min of Local Govt)
14Lessons learned from SNV viewpoint
- The process can take a long time to complete (up
to 1,5 years) - Once people involved understand the process and
the purpose they become motivated - Keeping a good record of all meetings,
documentation of outcomes throughout the process
is crucial to come up with a good document - The composition of the strategic planning
committee determines the success of the process
(motivated people at influential positions such
as CEO, Councilors, HoDs, people from the RDDC). - The process is often to expensive for RDCs given
the current situation and priorities. This
affects the quality and time it takes to
complete.
15Different process developments for different
local authorities
16Major challenges and solutions
- Little money for process.
- Limited CEO availability.
- Other priorities (e.g. food security, AIDS/HIV).
- Scale down process, hold internal meetings with
less people, make use of existing documentation
and parallel activities (e.g. scans), be
realistic in planning. - Delegate to capable, motivated HoDs.
- Address these priorities first and also take them
into account as strategic objectives.
17Pitfalls observed
- Rushing through the process to save time and
money and dragging the process resulting in loss
of momentum - Delegate to someone who is not in a position to
command authority - Not acknowledging other more important priorities
- Not documenting process, not keeping important
documents (minutes, sheets) - Copying parts from other local authorities
documents - Seeing Strategic Planning as something that will
solve everything - Seeing Strategic Planning not in connection to
other activities/processes that take place in a
local authority
18Best practices
- Prepare budget for process (to understand steps
involved and financial implications) - Involve 1 or 2 people from other organizations to
participate in the SP committee - Meet frequently with a small core team of 3-4
people - CEO to delegate responsibilities early on if CEO
is to occupied with other priorities to champion
process - Involve 1 or 2 councilors to facilitate
acceptance and information flow between staff and
councilors - Document extensively to capture not only the
outcome (e.g. lists of points) but also the
(strategic) thinking involved - Relate Strategic Planning to other activities
taking place (e.g. performance management, annual
planning, project definition, NGO activities) - Be positive (e.g. look at strengths and
opportunities)
19SNV Advice
- There can be a standard approach, but the process
varies. Any approach chosen should be flexible. - GoZ could allocate funding for this process to
facilitate it. - Ministry of Local Government could produce
guiding manuals, standards to assist local
authorities. - A platform could be further developed at national
or provincial level where local authorities share
their experiences and learn from each other
regarding the strategic planning process. - The SP should guide annual planning. It should
not only be a bookshelf document nicely bound.
20Way Forward SNV
- To continuously relate capacity development
activities to the organisations strategy. - THANK YOU
-