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A strategic plan for your business gives you the power to focus your efforts, target your investment and align your team as we forge ahead in 2020. Whatever your business may be, and whatever your goals are, your team must row in sync with team members having thorough knowledge of company priorities.
At this time of year, it’s essential to work off a single set of objectives. And yet, we find time and time again that too many businesses fall short in this regard. Some simply undertake a budgeting exercise toward year-end, while others don’t do any planning, and as a result, lack goals for the fiscal year.
If your business simply sells the same products and/or services to the same customers year after year and responds (i.e., reacts) to whatever opportunities present themselves, you have little choice but to “be the tail of the dog” to the marketplace. This means three things:
Few executives can maintain meaningful touchpoints with each individual in their organization once it grows larger. Once you get beyond 20 or 30 employees, you need to guide employees in other ways beyond action-oriented tasking (i.e., do this, do that). If you want employees to be proactive in customer/client service, how can they do it if they don’t know what the company’s priorities are—or if those priorities don’t exist? For example, have you decided which customers are your more important customers—i.e., customers you want to increase focus on and increase revenue from? Is it more important to grow existing customer relationships in 2020, or pursue new ones? Are your customers seeking new products and services from you or from your competitors?
A solid strategic plan for 2020 will help you answer these and other questions, and position your business for success. It doesn’t need to be complicated, multifaceted or occur through long meetings over weeks or months. Rather, it unfolds in a three-step process:
As part of this effort, you should have a baseline of knowledge for where your business currently resides. If you’re already growing by, say, 3 percent, and you seek 10 percent growth, you need to increase your current growth performance by 7 percent.
As you undertake strategic planning and determine your goals for 2020, keep the following in mind:
Without a clear plan, without getting buy-in from your team, and without accurate measures of success, you’ll end up somewhere…but it’s probably not where you’d like to be. As Yogi Berra once said “You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you’re going, because you might not get there.” Conversely, by implementing some basic strategic planning, and using the steps outlined above, you’ll have a clear destination, and a roadmap to get you there. In the end, your plan should reconcile your aspirations with marketplace and organizational reality to arrive at a sweet spot where growth and profitability are realistic and achievable.
Do you have questions about strategic planning for your business, or other business growth issues? Please contact your ALL advisor or call us at 617-738-5200.
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