How to Map Strategy Execution Processes

Clarify the building blocks for strategy execution: It takes an integrated team to guide and monitor the execution with individual representation of the ideas and knowledge of the mechanics collaborating to deliver a meaningful result. The strategic themes are essentially the pillars of the organization. They include business growth, operational excellence, customer service excellence, product development, innovation and sustainability. Strategic perspectives are financial aspect, customers and stakeholders, internal processes, organizational capability and engaged leadership. The four building blocks required for effective strategy execution are clarifying decisions right, designing information flow, aligning motivators and making changes to structures.
Mapping Vision - Strategy - Tactics: By mapping strategy to execution, you need to well define the business goals (both long term and short term). What you are going to achieve could be “LONG TERM” or “SHORT TERM” goals. Usually companies need to measure the goals using certain KPIs which are very much to do with time and investment. After that, they need to have SHORT-TERM actions which are aligned with the goals. The managements need to make sure that STRATEGY are on the right track, otherwise they have to take corrective ACTIONS. If strategy (the deliberate strategy) is planned or intended, usually it is LONG TERM. The time factor is needed because you want to measure your performance. If there is no time-frame for the strategy, the actions are meaningless because you could keep executing forever. For emergent strategy, you could have short term or long term goals as well. There are three interrelated terms: vision, strategy and tactics:-Vision: What you want the organization to be (your dream). -Strategy: What you are going to do to achieve your vision (goals) -Tactics: How you will achieve your strategy and when (actions).
Manage Execution via Balanced Scorecard and beyond: In strategy based balanced scorecard, organizations try to align its strategies to corporate goals and objectives and cascade strategic intent to all departments of the organizations. The balanced scorecard approach helps organizations translate their strategy into key performance indicators that can be cascaded down to department, teams and even individuals. This is a great way to set objectives and monitor them. However, it is not easy to develop sound KPIs. To quote Drucker : What gets measured gets managed. Costs, profit are easy to measure, but even more important ones such as quality, customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction and environmental impact are much more difficult to measure. As a result, they are often left out of balanced scorecards, and therefore not managed. Furthermore, developing, monitoring and managing objectives is crucial for successful strategy execution. However, soft aspects such as leadership, conveying the strategy, cultivating high-performing culture, empowering and motivating employees, etc are as important, if not more important. Such key practices are not part of the balanced scorecard, but also need to be managed well.

The success of strategy management undoubtedly lies in the ''timely execution,'' and this can be achieved only through continuous persistence and follow up, the effective processes, efficient tools, and the high-performing culture to get it right with the sense of urgency.Follow us at: @Pearl_Zhu
Published on July 06, 2015 23:27
No comments have been added yet.