Does Your Organization Have a Good Strategy (Or Any Strategy at All)?
February 3, 2024Game On: Unleashing the Strategic Power of Business Wargaming
April 4, 2024Operationalizing Strategy: A Practical Guide to Turning Vision into Reality
A strategy without execution is merely an aspiration. For a strategy to be effective, it must be operationalized.
What does it mean to operationalize a strategy? It’s about translating your long-term strategic objectives into tangible, achievable operational goals that form a plan you can execute. But how do you do it effectively and efficiently? This is the key question we will tackle in this post.
Step 1: From Strategic Objectives to Operational Goals
The first step in operationalizing your strategy is converting your long-term (3-5 year) strategic objectives into one-year operational goals.
How many operational goals should you have? It depends on the number and complexity of your strategic objectives. As a general rule, you should have enough to adequately focus your organization’s efforts and resources (or ways and means, referencing our previous post on strategy) to achieve your strategic objectives (ends) without overwhelming your team with too many priorities. For many organizations I work with, a range of 10 to 20 operational goals is common, with 3 to 4 strategic objectives and 3 to 5 operational goals per objective.
Ensure that the operational goals are cross-functional, aligning the various departments and roles within your organization to put you on a trajectory toward your strategic vision.
Furthermore, the goals should be “SMART”:
- Specific: Are your goals clear and unambiguous?
- Measurable: Can you track progress and measure the outcome?
- Achievable: Are your goals realistic and attainable?
- Relevant: Do they align with your strategic objectives?
- Time-Bound: Have you set a deadline?
By ensuring that your operational goals are both functionally aligned toward your strategic objectives and SMART, you’re taking the first steps in setting your organization up for success.
Step 2: Pressure-Test Your Goals by Assessing Risks and Opportunities
Operationalizing your strategy requires managing risks and capitalizing on opportunities. Once you’ve identified your operational goals, it’s crucial to brainstorm potential risks and opportunities, and assess them based on probability and impact.
One way to effectively do this is to get your team in a room with a whiteboard and give them each two sets of post-it notes – one color for risks and a separate color for opportunities.
Then, ask each of your team members to write down what they believe are the top risks and opportunities associated with your strategic objectives, using a separate note for each risk or opportunity.
Next, draw a two-dimensional graph on the whiteboard with the vertical axis labeled “probability” and the horizontal axis labeled “impact.” Then divide it into quadrants:
- Bottom left: Low probability, low impact
- Top left: High probability, low impact
- Bottom right: Low probability, high impact
- Top right: High probability, high impact
Read each post-it note and ask your team members to roughly assess high / medium / low probability and high / medium / low impact – then stick it in the graph according to their assessment. If two or more team members identified the same risk or opportunity, stick the notes close to each other to create a cluster.
For the risks and opportunities that land squarely in the top right quadrant (high probability, high impact), discuss as a team how you can mitigate each risk and capitalize on each opportunity.
Finally, if your operational goals don’t adequately address these key risks and opportunities, consider whether you need to adjust the goals. Wargaming and contingency planning can also be beneficial here, but that’s a topic for our next post.
Step 3: Translating Goals into Functional Milestones
Now that you have operational goals with risk mitigation and opportunity capitalization plans in place, it’s time to break down these goals into functional milestones for your team. For each functional leader, these should be their top priorities each quarter in support of each operational goal.
Think of your operational goals as “what” your team needs to accomplish together over the next year to put you on a trajectory to achieve your strategic objectives, and consider your quarterly functional milestones as “how” each functional leader on your team will contribute to the effort. An effective way to do this is to have your functional leaders take some time to think about their “how” and then present their quarterly functional priorities to your leadership team.
Ensure that these functional priorities help your team efficiently and synergistically achieve your operational goals with minimal gaps and overlaps between functions, and that the milestones are properly synchronized from a resourcing perspective. By providing a clear, synchronized, and synergistic roadmap for your team, you will keep everyone aligned with your overall strategy and maximize your chances of accomplishing your operational goals efficiently and effectively.
Step 4: Developing an Execution Tracking Plan
Finally, you need to track your progress. As historian H. Thomas Johnson wisely said, “What you measure is what you get.”
A dashboard with red-yellow-green stoplight thresholds can be an effective way to provide a visual representation of your performance toward achieving your functional milestones and operational goals. In addition to Microsoft Excel, there are a number of goal-setting software tools available that can help you with this. You can even build your own dashboard using Microsoft’s AI-enabled Power Apps.
Most importantly, you need to review your progress with your team members on a recurring basis to ensure teamwork, accountability, adequate resource allocation, and proper prioritization. Schedule monthly reviews with your team to problem-solve any issues that arise, whether they’re barriers, constraints, or resource needs.
During these monthly reviews, pressure-test the “green” milestones and goals with your team to ensure the data accurately reflects reality. For ones that are “yellow,” discuss what you can do as a team to get back on track. For milestones or goals that are “red,” problem-solve together to determine root causes and then prioritize resources needed for corrective action.
Lastly, if you developed contingency plans during your risk assessment in Step 2, use your monthly reviews to evaluate critical information signals within “yellow” or “red” milestones in order to trigger initiation of those plans. We’ll discuss this concept more in our next post, so stay tuned.
Conclusion
Operationalizing your strategy isn’t just about setting goals; it’s about creating a comprehensive plan that guides your organization toward your strategic objectives. By following these steps, you can turn your vision into a practical reality, ensuring that your organization doesn’t just thrive but excels in today’s competitive business landscape.
Do you need support with operationalizing your strategy? We can help.