|
Will You Add? - Dynamic Strategy Process to Increase the Value of Your Initiatives
Rules For Winning Interviews1.Know your past achievements. An achievement is something that excited you, gave you a feeling of pride, something that you enjoyed doing. Each achievement is made up of factors that have made you successful: creativity, for example, or management, directing, leading, or selling.2. Do your research. Gather and analyse information about the company and the companies’ competition. Your painstaking research should include: what the company produces, who the company’s customers are, what their culture is like, and if they have a company mission and, if so, what it is. Also find out if they are growing and why, what their plans are for the future, and who their primary competition is. Your knowledge about them will not only contribute to your self-confidence, but also show that you have sincere interest in them.3. Answer all questions directly. Don’t get long-winded or go off on unrelated tangents. The best insurance for a direct response is to listen: do your company research; and know your skills, achievement ing.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the object
Five Tips To A Successful Interview Follow-Up LetterThe interview follow-up letter is the last of the essential tools in your job-hunting bag. This is for more than one reason. The two obvious ones are the thank you and follow-up, and the other important reason is to fill in any holes that you suspect that you left open during the interview.1. Write The Follow-Up Letter Immediately: Once you return home, write the follow-up letter the same day as the interview. Being late with the letter can potentially reflect badly on you, or worse, make you be forgotten.2. Include An Incident That Occurred At The Interview: Make reference to any small but pleasant incident (or subject matter) that might have occurred at the interview that will catch the interviewers’ attention. How will this help you? This makes you stand out from the crowd and triggers memories of the entire interview. It gets the interviewer to think beyond the notes he or she made during the interview.3. Write To Every Interviewer: Writing individual letters not only demonst Introduction
With numerous isolated initiatives running concurrently within an organization, there is often little idea of how they interact or overlap, leading to no clear overview of the benefits. The result is duplication and the need to repeat initiatives on regular intervals. Research shows that on average 40% of value of an initiative is not realized. However, having a logical way of structuring the same initiatives can lead to enormous benefits and a lot more realized value. Types of Initiatives
The different types of initiatives in an organization can be categorized as follows:
- System improvement initiatives: Such projects involve using technology to streamline, automate and/or integrate processes and systems across the organization. There has been a strong focus on such projects since middle of the last decade, especially to introduce enterprise resource planning systems and during post merger system integration.
- Performance improvement initiatives: Initiatives to improve the performance of the business are a recurring theme, especially when the business environment is challenging, e.g. during a recession. Typical initiatives include process improvement, cost reduction, efficiency drive, risk management etc.
- 3. Change of strategy led initiatives: Such initiatives are a result of a change of strategy focus, e.g. concentrating on growth, entering a new market, becoming more customer focused, complying to government regulation etc. Examples of these types of initiatives include CRM (customer relationship management), Sarbanes Oxley implementation initiative, ISO9000 certification etc.
Reasons for Failure
While such initiatives do deliver some value, the interesting question to understand is why they are a continuous feature of organizations. Why is there a requirement to have similar projects running over-and-over after every few years with enormous amounts of resources spent on them? The reasons lie in the manner in which these projects and initiatives are viewed, instigated and their scope defined.
- Taking a Static View - Essentially these initiatives are one off exercises that take a static view of the business and its strategies, i.e. a snap shot of the organization in time as a base. By the time a project is complete, and often even before that, the business environment has changed, thus limiting the potential benefits of the exercise just undertaken to a short period of time. The organization then introduces a new slightly changed strategy, calls in consultants all over again, and goes through a similar initiative under a different name.
- Working in Isolation - Most of the time such initiatives are viewed in isolation, largely due to the level of their complexity. However, in reality most initiatives are integrated and affect each other when operational. The consequence of which is that multiple projects often have redundancies in their scope and the effects of their interaction are not realised. The result is more wastage. Fox example, an initiative to introduce CRM will warrant a business process re-engineering exercise. However if an organization is going through a process re-engineering project now, they will have to repeat parts of the project again once the CRM initiatives have been completed.
- Initiatives without Strategy - With many initiatives going on at any one time, there is generally no logical clustering and thus there is no overall view of them. An organization ends up with numerous initiatives, some going in opposite directions. We recently came across a division of a UK Footsie 100 bank which had initiatives in the hundreds running in parallel. Needless to say, they struggle with keeping track of the projects, their alignment to the high level objectives and their benefits, especially in the long-term. As a result the initiatives are repeated in the future without an understanding of the benefits the may bring.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the object
Why Businesses Fail Horribly- Poor Or Inadequate Market ResearchIn this sharpshooting article, we help you take precise aim at your sales target.Market research is the process of systematic gathering, recording and analysing of data about customers, competitors and the market. It helps create a business plan, launch a new product or service, fine tune existing products and expand into new markets etc.It can be also be used to determine which portion of the population will purchase the product or service, based on age, gender, location and income level. It can be establish the characteristic of your target market.With proper market research, companies can make better business decisions about the development and marketing of new products. Market research represents the voice of the consumer in a company.This is vital to ensure that your business idea is viable.Lack of Adequate Market ResearchIn an effort to get a business plan together hastily, many business owners do not double-check and substantiate their claims.So it is your responsibility t nitiatives: Initiatives to improve the performance of the business are a recurring theme, especially when the business environment is challenging, e.g. during a recession. Typical initiatives include process improvement, cost reduction, efficiency drive, risk management etc.
- 3. Change of strategy led initiatives: Such initiatives are a result of a change of strategy focus, e.g. concentrating on growth, entering a new market, becoming more customer focused, complying to government regulation etc. Examples of these types of initiatives include CRM (customer relationship management), Sarbanes Oxley implementation initiative, ISO9000 certification etc.
Reasons for Failure
While such initiatives do deliver some value, the interesting question to understand is why they are a continuous feature of organizations. Why is there a requirement to have similar projects running over-and-over after every few years with enormous amounts of resources spent on them? The reasons lie in the manner in which these projects and initiatives are viewed, instigated and their scope defined.
- Taking a Static View - Essentially these initiatives are one off exercises that take a static view of the business and its strategies, i.e. a snap shot of the organization in time as a base. By the time a project is complete, and often even before that, the business environment has changed, thus limiting the potential benefits of the exercise just undertaken to a short period of time. The organization then introduces a new slightly changed strategy, calls in consultants all over again, and goes through a similar initiative under a different name.
- Working in Isolation - Most of the time such initiatives are viewed in isolation, largely due to the level of their complexity. However, in reality most initiatives are integrated and affect each other when operational. The consequence of which is that multiple projects often have redundancies in their scope and the effects of their interaction are not realised. The result is more wastage. Fox example, an initiative to introduce CRM will warrant a business process re-engineering exercise. However if an organization is going through a process re-engineering project now, they will have to repeat parts of the project again once the CRM initiatives have been completed.
- Initiatives without Strategy - With many initiatives going on at any one time, there is generally no logical clustering and thus there is no overall view of them. An organization ends up with numerous initiatives, some going in opposite directions. We recently came across a division of a UK Footsie 100 bank which had initiatives in the hundreds running in parallel. Needless to say, they struggle with keeping track of the projects, their alignment to the high level objectives and their benefits, especially in the long-term. As a result the initiatives are repeated in the future without an understanding of the benefits the may bring.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the object
Setting Fees For Your Consulting BusinessSetting consulting fees and hourly rates for a new consultant can be a challenging process. If you set the hourly rate too high, you won't get business, set the hourly rate to low and you'll not make money.There are several factors that determine the correct hourly rate for flat consulting fee. The most important is quite simply, how much do you need? There is a formula for setting this rate and you'll be surprised how closely the result parallels what others charge.X = hourly consulting rateTo find XX=y+H+M+P+FHow do we find X?First we need to define a few constants. We'll start with our base rate which is Y.A= is the salary you desire
B= the number of hours you can realistically bill in one year.To define the base rate (Y) A/B
So for example if you desire a salary of $80,000 per year and you can bill 1500 hours as an IT consultant you are left e rate of $53 per hour. This is not your base rate, you still have one more calculation.Next we have to a easons lie in the manner in which these projects and initiatives are viewed, instigated and their scope defined.
- Taking a Static View - Essentially these initiatives are one off exercises that take a static view of the business and its strategies, i.e. a snap shot of the organization in time as a base. By the time a project is complete, and often even before that, the business environment has changed, thus limiting the potential benefits of the exercise just undertaken to a short period of time. The organization then introduces a new slightly changed strategy, calls in consultants all over again, and goes through a similar initiative under a different name.
- Working in Isolation - Most of the time such initiatives are viewed in isolation, largely due to the level of their complexity. However, in reality most initiatives are integrated and affect each other when operational. The consequence of which is that multiple projects often have redundancies in their scope and the effects of their interaction are not realised. The result is more wastage. Fox example, an initiative to introduce CRM will warrant a business process re-engineering exercise. However if an organization is going through a process re-engineering project now, they will have to repeat parts of the project again once the CRM initiatives have been completed.
- Initiatives without Strategy - With many initiatives going on at any one time, there is generally no logical clustering and thus there is no overall view of them. An organization ends up with numerous initiatives, some going in opposite directions. We recently came across a division of a UK Footsie 100 bank which had initiatives in the hundreds running in parallel. Needless to say, they struggle with keeping track of the projects, their alignment to the high level objectives and their benefits, especially in the long-term. As a result the initiatives are repeated in the future without an understanding of the benefits the may bring.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the object
Brand Promise, Do You Deliver?Recruit the right staff and coach them to deliver.For the past few years, the media has been sharing businesses’ complaints about the lack of qualified workers. Recruiters and business leaders moan about poor work histories, poor skills, and poor attitudes. The labor pool is overflowing with poor quality candidates. What’s a business to do?Your brand is defined in hundreds of moments of truth each day. People used to tell an average of 13 people about their experience with poor service. The growth of technology gives them the power to tell millions through the use of email, social networking, and blogs. You can’t afford one unhappy customer.Retain the good people you have. If finding good people is difficult, you can’t afford to lose the good ones you have. Think of them as customers and apply techniques to keep them just as you would create and execute a customer retention strategy. Treat them like the partners they are in growing your business: Reward them appropriately. Share information about the d the effects of their interaction are not realised. The result is more wastage. Fox example, an initiative to introduce CRM will warrant a business process re-engineering exercise. However if an organization is going through a process re-engineering project now, they will have to repeat parts of the project again once the CRM initiatives have been completed.
- Initiatives without Strategy - With many initiatives going on at any one time, there is generally no logical clustering and thus there is no overall view of them. An organization ends up with numerous initiatives, some going in opposite directions. We recently came across a division of a UK Footsie 100 bank which had initiatives in the hundreds running in parallel. Needless to say, they struggle with keeping track of the projects, their alignment to the high level objectives and their benefits, especially in the long-term. As a result the initiatives are repeated in the future without an understanding of the benefits the may bring.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the object
What Makes a Great Working Environment?We know a lot about what a great working environment is.In a great working environment the mission is being accomplished and morale is high. It's the "user" side of the two key leadership objectives: accomplish the mission and care for your people.Most people know exactly what I mean by a great working environment. They may not be able to list characteristics, or point to research, but they've usually experienced one. So have you.Think about a time in your life when it was great to come to work. If you're lucky there are lots of them. If you're really lucky, now is one of those times.What was it like then? I'll bet you were excited about the work you were doing, and you knew that it was appreciated. You almost certainly felt that you were being treated fairly and that you had some control over what you got to do.There's been quite a bit of formal research into the factors that make up a great working environment. Here's a quick summary of what the research tells us make for a great work ing.
How Value is Destroyed?
Since these initiatives do not reach any where close to their full potential and use resources that could otherwise be used on higher value-add projects, they are effectively destroying value for the organization.
Take a Strategy Lead Approach
Instead of starting by looking at initiatives, organizations need first to look at their strategies. By structuring and prioritising their strategies, a clear overview of what is needed to be achieved is determined and initiatives come out as a means of achieving those strategies. By managing a portfolio of strategies rather than a complex combination of initiatives, organizations can eliminate most of the issues mentioned above. Taking an integrated approach allows organizations to structure their initiatives inline with their strategies.
So what does it take to achieve such as approach:
- Clarify objective at every level – By making explicit what the objectives are for an organization at every level, employees become clear about what they are working towards. Being explicit requires an objective with a numerical, time and quality dimension, and a means of measuring it. E.g. not “We want to have a major market share is the market we operator in”, but “We must achieve a minimum of 25% of market share in the telco market targeting large organizations in Germany, within the next five years. The profit margin must be above 7%”.
Vision > Core Objectives > Critical Success Factors > Operational Objectives
These objectives must be defined such that the causality between the objectives at different levels is obvious. So achieving the Operational Objectives successfully satisfies the CSFs, achieving the CSFs satifies the Core Objectives and achieving the Core Objectives satisfies the Vision.
- Create a Value Delivery System – The VDS is the functional map of the organization. At every level, this determines the organizational unit or department or task that will work towards the objectives at the respective level.
Corporate > Functions > Tasks > Steps
The corporate level has the responsibility for working towards and achieving the Vision; the Functional (product management, sales, marketing etc.) targets the Core Objectives; Tasks are defined to achieve the CFSs and so on.
- Define initiative – Once the objectives are clear, define the initiatives that are required to achieve them. Only initiate projects that work towards achieving one of more of the objectives.
- Accountability - Allocate responsibility and assign resources for each of the initiatives.
- Track initiatives – Ensure that there is a method for tracking the level of implementation, performance and benefits for each of the initiatives.
- Recalibrate regularly – In the volatile environment that organizations operate in, objectives and ways of achieving them change constantly. Thus there needs to be a process of regularly checking to make sure that initiatives still serve the purpose that they where started for. If the objectives at any level have changed, continuing with the old initiatives is a waste of resources.
Benefits
Following the steps above achieves:
- Alignment between the various business units, functions and department within the organization
- Cascading of objectives against the now aligned organizational units. This brings the clarity and understanding of who does what and why, into the organization.
- Prioritization during resource allocation
The consequence is a high level of transparency to view initiatives, their alignment to strategy and the ability to track the performance of initiatives.
At the same time, by having a process of monitoring progress and recalibrating strategy continuously, an organization can make its strategy and initiative execution process more dynamic. Hence it does not have to wait for the annual strategy planning process to make a step change in direction, but rather make more manageable incremental changes all the time.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
<a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/22288/atriclecheck-Dynamic-Strategy-Process-to-Increase-the-Value-of-Your-Initiatives.html">Dynamic Strategy Process to Increase the Value of Your Initiatives</a>
BB link (for phorums):
[url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/22288/atriclecheck-Dynamic-Strategy-Process-to-Increase-the-Value-of-Your-Initiatives.html]Dynamic Strategy Process to Increase the Value of Your Initiatives[/url]
Related Articles:
Online Ordering For Restaurants – The Goose That Laid The Golden Egg Or A Rope Around Your Neck
The Restaurant Industry is abuzz with the concept of online ordering and the benefits that it brings. So, how do you go about offering online ordering to your customers?
Eight Signs That You Should Change Jobs
You have a job that pays well. You can meet your financial responsibilities easily, and you have extra money left over at the end of the month. Yet there's something missing... Time for a change? Maybe! Read on.
Learn Why Workplace Safety Is So Important
American workers in the United States are provided the safest working conditions. In spite of the stress and tedious types of work performed, the government works tireless to insure that the place you work is free from dangerous elements that threaten you health as well as your life.
|