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Articles by James A Robertson and Associates

SNw 009 If you do not have Time for Strategy, you do not have Time to Thrive
Created by James on 6/13/2013 2:06:54 PM


Returning to the discussion of strategy started last year this issue examines a key paradox in business --

many executives find that they do not have time for strategic planning and thinking and since some define strategy as the right things for the business to thrive this raises a major challenge -- if you do not have time for strategy you do not have time to lead your organization to thrive

 

Recap

In the August 2006 issue of StratNews I discussed "Determining Strategy".

This followed newsletters on "Measuring Competitive Performance" and "Competitive Advantage -- The Next Ten Years".

This thread relates to the reality that the strategic planning that most organizations undertake is reported by various authorities on strategy as failing to make a material positive difference to the organization in 90% of cases.  The series seeks to develop a case for formal and rigorous strategic analysis and design (strategic capability) that demonstrably produces the desired positive business outcomes.

 

Strategy -- The Essence of Organizational Existence

In 1990 I concluded that I could not define strategy in a single sentence.

In fact, notwithstanding the fact that I considered myself to be strategically competent, I found, in writing a white paper on the importance of aligning Information Technology with Strategy that I could not define the term strategy at all.  I embarked on a journey to discover what strategy really is and how to determine it and execute it reliably and effectively.  This article addresses some of the discoveries that I have made.

Since writing the article in 1990 I have found that most people, when asked to define strategy in one sentence, cannot do so and if they have a definition to offer there are widely disparate views.

I have also found that the descriptions of strategy given by international authorities differ considerably.

Accordingly, I have spent significant time over the last nearly two decades seeking to understand what strategy is, and what it is not, and to find a concise definition that is intuitively sound.

The conclusion that I have reached is that strategy is "the essence of why an organization exists and how it thrives".

It is my suggestion that all other definitions are, in fact, elaborations of this fundamental principle.

 

Strategy is "The Right Things" for the Business to Thrive

Professor Malcolm Macdonald over twenty years ago defined strategy as "doing the right things" and went on to propose that an organization that did the right things well would thrive.

If we couple this definition to that in the previous section, we see that strategy is the essence of what an organization does in order to thrive.

 

Too Busy for Strategy

Yet, many executives I meet say that they are "too busy" for strategic thinking, let alone strategic planning, let alone doing strategic things.

As they say this they seem oblivious to the irony of saying that they do not have time for the essence of why the organization exists and how it thrives.

 

Strategy is Discovered, NOT Invented

I have previously stated that strategy is discovered NOT invented.

Strategy is frequently an intuitive response to market forces and demands and is driven by the gut feel of those who are leading the organization.

This works well for a small organization, and may even work for a larger organization where the leadership team have been with the organization since it was small.

However, most medium to large organizations today have a degree of staff turnover and many actively go out and recruit executives from outside the organization.  Many people are not able to intuit an essential concept that is not written down or even formally expressed and talked about and therefore proceed on the basis of their own assumptions.

In my experience, in many organizations, as one seeks to discover the strategic driver of the organization there is no concise, common expression of the strategy of the organization, let alone its individual component drivers.

As a consequence, change initiatives from different parts of the organization, and even corporately driven top down change, is unfocussed and not aligned on a single core objective or informed by a single common understanding.

This results in some parts of the organization getting in the way of other parts and, overall, serious strategic inefficiency -- the organization is at best surviving more than it is thriving.

 

Strategic Efficiency Results in Operational Efficiency

I have also observed that strategic efficiency results in operational efficiency but focus on operational efficiency at the expense of strategic efficiency seriously impedes the long term efficency and success of the organization.

Where a concise strategically appropriate course of action is identified and acted upon by a team of people who have a common understanding, things come together and flow.  Where this is absent, people struggle to find the time to manage effectively and may increasingly find themselves fighting fires.

Strategic efficiency involves clearly defining the core strategy of the organization -- why it exists and how it thrives, understanding the drivers which propel it forward in proper context, setting goals aligned with these filters and developing and executing plans that work -- when this is done things fall into place and the huge collective corporate intellect of the organization is harnessed in harmony towards a clear objective and the organization thrives.

When this is not in place the organization will drift somewhere between what MacDonald defines as "survive" and "die fast".

As identified in the newsletter on "I.T. -- The Harshest Judge of Governance", an Information Technology project is the corporate endeavour most vulnerable to this phenomenon.  70% of I.T. projects fail outright, frequently for lack of strategic alignment.  Such failures can seriously damage or even destroy a business.  An I.T. project failure that results in loss of major customers is more expensive than most organizations can afford.

 

How Do You Find Time for Strategy?

This raises the question "How do YOU find time for Strategy?"

Some years ago, in response to my experience with a client that was transitioning rapidly from the "thrive" quadrant to what looked as if it could end up in "die fast" -- there were indications that it could lose one of its biggest clients -- I developed a list of factors that were required for executive availability, effectiveness and efficiency:

1. Empowerment: Subordinates at all levels motivated, empowered to act, supported in event of sincere mistakes, leadership by example, facilitation to achieve -- NOT domination, clear hierarchy and respect for hierarchy, teams NOT committees.

2. Strategic Capability: Effective strategic analysis, design and execution methods, standards, practices, etc.

3. Personal Assistants: Executives have equipped, motivated, trained, loyal, long term personal assistants.

4. Time Management: Effective time management tools, methods, training and practical day to day implementation -- NOT about computer based technology.

5. Document Management: Filing and document management standards consistently applied throughout the organization -- this is about standards, practices, training, etc and NOT about technology.

6. Value Creation: Executives focus their attention on activities which create sustainable value relative to customers, personnel, suppliers and shareholders.

7. Strategic Action: Executives equipped to think and act strategically and take effective strategic decisions on a continuous basis -- includes knowledge, method, systems, training, etc.

ALL these factors are vital for success in terms of executive availability, effectiveness and efficiency -- specifically so that executives are freed up to focus on items 6 and 7 which is where executive effectiveness is attained.

Developing these attributes in an organization will, over time, support organizational strategic capability and an organization which thrives sustainably.

 

The Time to Find the Time

However there is a snag -- how do you get the time to find the time to do these things?

A critical shift in focus is required -- identify the critical factors (concerns) that are consuming resources and hindering the organization -- the things that are consuming value -- not more than seven factors weighted and scored as discussed previously -- the things you want to do less of.

Identify the critical factors that generate value, not more than seven factors weighted and scored -- the things you want to do more of.

Determine the gaps and take concrete measures to close them.

As the organization focusses on the critical factors and aligns itself with those that create value and minimizes those that consume or destroy value it will, in time, create additional capacity by freeing up resources.  Getting there will be a challenge that requires robust acceptance by management that a change is called for.

In particular, develop strategic capability and strategic governance -- care for the essence of why the organization exists and how it thrives.

The essence of what I am proposing is a mental shift of focus and emphasis, NOT a huge piece of time consuming work -- it WILL require ongoing work to shift the mind set and stay shifted and it may require coaching, mentoring or strategic advisory input over a year or more to bring about a fundamental shift in focus, but it can be done.

 

Conclusion -- If you do not have time for Strategy you do not have time to Thrive

To sum up:

Strategy is the essence of why an organization exists and how it thrives.

If you do not have time for strategy then you do not have time to enable the organization to thrive and, eventually if not corrected, the organization will probably die.  The competitive environment today is fundamentally different to that which has existed at any time in recorded history.

Strategic focus is a mental position and attitude shift that requires conscious choice and focussed corporate effort over time to achieve.

The long term benefit of this change in position will be an organization that thrives and achieves its appropriate corporate objectives.

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Dr James A Robertson PrEng The ERP Doctor

Business Systems NOT delivering?

Call the Business Systems Specialist

Dr. James Robinson

Dr James A Robertson -- has been involved in the effective application of Business Information Systems, including but NOT limited to ERP, since 1987 and in the profitable and effective use of computers in Business since 1981.

Drawing on a diversity of experience, including formal military training in Quick Attack techniques at the Regimental Commander level, Dr Robertson has developed highly effective methods of investigating any sub-optimal Business Information Systems situation -- be it an established system or a stalled project or any other source of Executive frustration -- quickly and concisely diagnosing the root cause of the problem and prescribing concise practical actions that Business Executives can effectively act on see the Pulse Measurement page and also the Sample Reports page for redacted real reports.

He has also developed highly effective methods of strategically enriching systems to unlock the full potential of existing investments, see the Precision Configuration page and couples this to architecting small pieces of clever software that harness the full potential of your investment, see the Software page.

If you are having problems with your systems, your project or your IT Department, call The Business Systems Specialist
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Business System Failure is RIFE -- we offer insight into why this happens AND WHAT is required to prevent it.

Failure is at epidemic levels with massive damage done to client companies -- if you are NOT aware of the extent of the problem please visit the About Failure page for a catalog of major failures running to billions of Pounds and Dollars.

All evidence indicates that the established players do NOT know how to deliver stable, reliable high value solutions that WORK.

There HAS to be a better way!

This website provides information relating to that way with a large collection of white papers, presentations, standards documents, etc that you can use to start bringing the situation under control

We also offer high level advisory services with regard to the application of the principles advocated on this website

We offer an ENGINEERING APPROACH to addressing these issues

Click here to read more about the Engineering Approach

By Engineering I mean the formal, structured, highly disciplined, highly systematic, highly practical approach that consistently delivers results in ALL areas of human endeavor where formally trained and certified engineers are the ONLY practitioners permitted to operate -- think large buildings, factories, motor vehicles, aircraft -- highly complex systems that work at a level that we take it for granted that they WILL work and where failure is all but unthinkable and, when it happens, attracts immediate public attention and rigorous investigation directed at ensuring that such failures are prevented in the future -- in fact, everything that the management consulting industry that implements complex software systems is NOT

This approach is discussed further on the Engineering Approach page.

Book -- The Critical Factors for Information Technology Investment Success

In 2003 I undertook an in-depth analysis of all the information and experience that I had gathered with regard to the factors giving rise to Business Information System failure including ERP and general IT and classified this information into a number of categories including "The Factors Causing Failure" and "The Critical Factors for Success" based on this I developed a two day Course "The Critical Factors for Information Technology Investment Success" which is still offered today.

Based on this I wrote the book of the same name, which is available in electronic form here for download:

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Table of Contents

Home

About Dr James A Robertson PrEng -- The Business Systems Doctor -- and Other Topics

Catalogue of Major Business Information System Failures

About the Engineering Approach

James Robertson's Value Add

Attributes of a HIGH VALUE solution

Recognizing Business System Failure

The Critical Human Foundation

Old Software IS Viable

From South Africa

Competencies of Dr James A Robertson PrEng

About Professor Malcolm McDonald

Table of Contents

About my relationship with the Almighty Creator, Yah the Eternally Self-Existing

Comments relating to the Business Systems Industry and other topics

Testimonials and other positive material regarding James Robertson

Reference Articles

List of Articles

Article Catalogue

Achieving High Value Business Information System outcomes

Executive Custody -- What is it and HOW do you get it?

The REAL Issues in Integrated Business Information System Success

Part 1: Introduction

Part 2 -- Mythology and Lack of Executive Custody

Part 3 – Strategic Alignment and Precision Configuration

Why your ERP is NOT delivering and HOW to FIX it

IT Project Management

Pulse Measurement

CEO Anthony Lee Comments on his experience of the Pulse Measurement

No Charge Guarantee on the Pulse Measurement Service

Examples of Pulse Measurement Outcomes

Critical questions regarding the Pulse Measurement™

The Pulse Measurement Workflow

The Critical Factors for Business System (ERP+) Investment Success in the Pulse Measurement

Indicative Pulse Measurement Durations

What is a JAR&A Pulse Measurement?

Survival of the fittest – why it makes sense to measure the pulse of your business

Examples of Pulse Measurement Outcomes over 24 years

Sample Pulse Measurement Reports

Strategy

Strategic Essence: The Missing Link in Business Information Systems

Strategic Essence: Overview

Strategic Essence: Part 1 -- Strategy Defined

Strategic Essence: Part 2 -- Differentiation

Strategic Essence: Part 3 -- The Essence IS Different

Strategic Essence: Part 4 -- The Essence should be the Point of Departure

Strategic Essence: Part 5 -- Discovering Strategic Essence

Strategy -- the Essence of the Business: What is it and how do you develop actionable strategic plans?

Simple Steps to Increase the Strategic Value of your ERP Investment

Free Strategic Snapshot Toolset and Manual

A strategy focused planning system beyond traditional budgeting

Tough IT and ERP Procurement and Contracting that Works

Robust Business Systems Procurement

Part 1 -- Introduction

Part 2 -- Bill of Services, Laboratory, Go-live Certificate, etc

Part 3 -- Executive Engagement, Bid Compliance, Adjudication and other matters

Procurement Documents

Guidance and Advisory Services

The Art of Project Leadership

Why Regular Communication with the CEO is Vital

The Business Simulation Laboratory

Precision Configuration and Strategic Business Information Architecture

Precision Configuration based on Strategic Engineered Precision Taxonomies

The JAR&A Cubic Business Model

Highly Structured Strategic Chart of Accounts -- a Vital Element of your Corporate Information Arsenal

The Product Catalogue -- an Essential Element of any Precision Configuration

Attributes -- answers to the questions you have NOT yet thought to ask

Case Studies of Notably Successful Projects with high value Precision Configuration

092 Doing things differently and better -- ASCO Case Study 2-- BPM Summit 2013

088 Strategic ERP Invesment -- ASCO Case Study -- Service Management Conference and Exhibition Africa

026 Information Architecture and Design of FIS for Rennies Group -- Financial Information Systems Conf

018 CRM Risk Control: Designing and Implementing an Integrated Risk Mgmt Sys -- Integrated Risk Mgmt Conf

011 V3 Consulting Eng: Benefits of MIS to Professional Practice -- SAICE 15th Ann Conf on Computers in Civil Eng

Strategically Enriching your Business Information Systems

Part 1 -- Introduction

Part 2 -- Principles of Data Engineering

Part 3 -- Steps in applying these recommendations

Simple Steps to increase the strategic information value yield from your Business Systems Investment

The Full JAR&A Taxonomy Manual

Part 1: Introduction, Problem Statement, Definitions and Examples

Part 2: Why Use JAR&A, Required Knowledge and Experience, Cubic Business Model and Chart of Accounts and Taxonomy Software

Part 3: How to do it, Case Studies and White Papers and other References

Example General Ledger Manual

Business Process -- Irrelevant, Distracting and Dangerous

The RIGHT Approach

Custom Strategic Software Design and Oversight of Construction

Standards for Custom Software Specification

What IS Software?

IT Effectiveness

Organizing Outlook

Critical Factors for I.T. Success

A Moral and Ethical Dilemma -- Systems that Fail

Case Studies examining Business Information System failures

The BBC Digital Media Initiative Debacle

The Bridgestone -- IBM Conflict

Speaking and Training

Showcase of Conference Presentations

Most Viewed Presentations

Briefings and Seminars

Why your ERP/BIS is NOT delivering and HOW to FIX it

ERP and IT Procurement that Delivers Results

The Critical Factors for IT and ERP Investment Success

Other Seminars

Conferences and Public Presentations

Conferences 80 to 99 -- 2009 to Present

Conferences 60 to 79 -- 2005 to 2009

Conferences 40 to 59 -- 1996 to 2005

Conferences 20 to 39 -- 1994 to 1996

Conferences 01 to 19 -- 1989 to 1994

On-Line Seminars (Webinars)

Webinar on Preparing and Presenting Webinars

Contacting James A Robertson and Associates Limited