Thursday, August 30, 2007
Be Sure Your Strategies are Supported by Commitments
The year hasn't even started and spirits are dampened and an opportunity is lost. Sound familiar? Strategies are not just good ideas and wishful thinking. They are components of a well-planning and established vision that needs the proper financial support and commitment.
Another commitment needed by all portions of a strategic plan is the commitment to make it happen. I've worked with credit unions that have a great planning document and it rarely gets looked at again until the next planning retreat approaches. This is a bad idea and a waste of time. The plan must have the commitment of those responsible for getting things done and executives actually taking on the action plans as a meaningful part of their daily work program.
College football teams like to start with a first game patsy, to get off on the right foot with a convincing win, build some confidence and gather momentum in necessary commitments for when the tough opponents come to play.
The same approach can be used when building commitments to your planning process. Start with the easy victories first. Demonstrate progress by accomplishing action plans and showing quick results. This gathers momentum for the staff to support and make commitments to the plan, the board seeing success and progress becomes easier on the financials as long as they know good progress (winning) is happening.
What are the easy victories? Small projects and visible projects are the best early wins. One credit union client wanted a new marquis that was programmable and had lots of active motion as an attention getter. The board approved it and it was quickly purchased and installed. As a "test" of the programming the first couple of days ran a scroll of a thank you to the board for their foresight to approve the project. The marquis was a piece of a larger marketing initiative to be more visible. Did thanking the board the first day help? It didn't hurt at all!
Commitments from the board and executive team for the proper funding and the proper work output is critical to giving your strategic plan a fighting chance for victory.
-- Russell
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Why should your strategic plan be written by a team?
What this means, in simple terms, is that you want to involve people who have day-to-day management responsibilities in three areas of your credit union: sales/marketing, operations, and finance. Specifically, I'd suggest considering the following people for your strategic planning team:
-CEO (always)
-Business Development
-CFO/controller
-IT
-Human resources
-Member relations
While this is not an exhaustive list, it's a pretty good starting point. For reasons of creating good group dynamics, we've found that the ideal strategic planning team is made up of 5-10 people, so you will probably choose to have one or two more or less than the suggested titles above.
You probably have also noted that we did NOT list the board members. The board should have a strategic planning meeting - but its purpose should be to digest the plan created by the management staff and make suggestions to the CEO on how best to implement the strategic. In my experience, board-generated strategic plans inevitably flounder because they lack the two key elements - input and commitment - that should be required of every participant in your planning team.
-Robert
Friday, August 24, 2007
What is Your Strategic Focus?
A friend of mine was a phys. Ed. teaching in an elementary school and he put the entire class on one side of a tug of war rope, and he stood on the other side. He thought he’d have fun and play with the kids pulling against him before finally winning with a good pull. Much to his surprise the kids were very focused on winning and with each of them pulling with focus he couldn’t beat them! The same goes for credit unions, when we focus and have a team that is focused we can beat a much bigger opponent.
What do you sell? Who are your targeted members or prospective members?
By taking the time to delve deeply into these questions you will find the focus you need to be taking as you plan out your strategies.Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Who are the Competition and How Do They Impact Us?
Information is power and that has never been more true than in the strategic planning process. You need good reliable information in order to win the battle for market share and membership growth.
-- Russell
Friday, August 17, 2007
Assumptions Are a Necessary Part of the Planning Process
Monday, August 13, 2007
Define Your Strategic Competency
Skills: A skill is any manual or mental activities that result from talent, training or practice.
Process: A process is any manual or mental systematic series of actions that are directed toward some end. Include any significant "know-how" resident in your credit union.
Knowledge: Knowledge includes any information, data, or understanding of facts, or principles resident in your credit union.
A strategic competency must be strategic in nature. For example, if you are the best at how to hold an employee birthday celebration, it doesn’t have much strategic value, because such celebrations are not going to directly improve your relationship to your members, or your competition.
A strategic competency is something that can be used over a long period of time, and it usually knowledge based. It is something that should elevate you above the industry norms and provide an advantage in the marketplace.
A strategic competency must pass four specific tests:
Is it a combination of skills, process and knowledge?
Does it differentiate the credit union from the competition?
Does it create strong value for the member?
Is it difficult to copy?
If you don’t get a resounding "yes" to each of these questions, you should be skeptical that you have a strategic competency.
-- Russell
Thursday, August 9, 2007
Why Do You Sell What You Sell?
How does this fit with our future direction?
Is this a profitable product or actually a drain of resources?
How well do we sell this?
How well can our front line staff explain the features and benefits?
What percentage of our membership actually uses this product or service?
Do we want more members using this product?
If yes, how do we make that happen, if no, why are we still offering it?
Friday, August 3, 2007
The Next 15 Years are Only 5 Years Away
The key to effective market projections is to be tuned in. Some CEO’s focus their energies on the day to day, getting caught up in the problem-solving of the organization and lose the bigger view, thus projections are short-sighted and inaccurate because they are not focusing in the correct area of their role as lead executive.
What cutting-edge knowledge are you listening to, accessing, and learning through seminars that keep you in tuned with future trends? Executives need to be retooling their knowledge every bit as much as the front line supervisor does to work with the new generations of workers. Proper projections give you advanced notice (although not nearly as much as you think) to prepare and make the proper developments for the new trends once they arrive.
Making accurate projections, even if they happen in one third the time you think they will, give you the opportunity to be proactive and make advances on your competition.