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Strategic Planning
| The best way to predict the future is to... |
...create it! |
using the
Perception Dynamics approach |
The Perception Dynamics approach to Strategic
Planning enables you to develop Strategic Plans that are so inherently
robust, even in highly unpredictable conditions, that they
dramatically increase
the certainty of successfully achieving the desired goals. Furthermore,
the Strategic Plans produced using the Perception Dynamics approach,
can be seamlessly integrated into the operational
structure to ensure complete alignment within an organisation.
Traditionally, the Strategic Planning
process has often focused on developing plans by defining where
the organisation is now, where it needs to be, and
then identifying the activities or processes that will
have to be carried out in order for the organisation to achieve its
goal.
However, as Strategic Planning inevitably
deals with long time-scales in an ever changing world, there is
typically a high degree of uncertainty about the future conditions
in which the plans are expected to
succeed. Unfortunately, as the
conditions become more and more unpredictable, plans
based on activities or processes become less and less useful. Indeed,
planned activities
can often become even less useful when
those strategies have to be implemented by people other than those
who originally developed the plans.
A simple analogy of this problem can
be seen by considering someone who has to drive a car in order to
arrive at a specific destination. Clearly, the conditions experienced
are likely to
vary considerably from one
journey to the
next. It
would be pointless to make a plan of the journey for someone, by
detailing the separate activities such as "turn the
steering wheel" or "press
the accelerator".
These activities may well be the types
of activities you can observe when someone is driving
a car. However, they give no indication of what is really happening
as the driver continually monitors and responds to the often unpredictable
conditions that are continually being created by other cars, pedestrians,
traffic
lights, road signals etc. Even with this barrage of unpredictable
events, the driver and car are still likely to arrive at the desired
destination in a way that cannot be accurately modelled or represented
by a planned set of activities or processes. Somehow, the car and
driver create a complete, intelligent control system that is able
to initiate any of the processes required to avoid the obstacles,
keep within the externally defined constraints such as
red signals or speed limits, and still arrive at the predicted destination.
Strategic planning is a process that
inherently has to deal with substantial uncertainty and variability
caused by external factors such as competitors, customers, governments,
trade unions etc. So, if
we want to develop plans that are robust enough to deal with such
substantial variability and uncertainty, we need to model and develop
those plans,
not in
activities or processes,
but in units that are analogous to the complete control
system created by the car and driver. These units would represent
intelligently controlled services that have the inherent capability
of achieving a critical goal, whatever the conditions.
Perception Dynamics uses the concept
of a service "pod" in order to represent an Intelligent,
Controlled Service that has been specifically designed to have the
capability of creating or achieving a specific
critical future state, even in variable circumstances. The term "pod" is
meant to represent the concept of a shell, capsule or boundary
that contains the complete controlled service, including all its
component parts such as the control systems, the processes triggered
by those
systems, and all the other resources necessary for success.
A "pod" is
analogous to a space
pod or vehicle.
So,
from inside the pod, it would be possible to view the controller
triggering all the processes necessary to guide the pod
to avoid unpredictable obstacles in order to achieve its ultimate
goal. The controller would be achieving this by viewing the
control panel giving continual feedback of relevant information and
using that information to take the appropriate, intelligent decisions.
A pod can also be viewed from the outside.
From this point of view, we cannot see the detailed processes or
activities that are being used inside the pod. Nevertheless, even
without seeing the operational detail that can only be viewed from
inside, we are still able to make a reasonable prediction of the
pod's capability of achieving a particular goal, from experience
of the past performance of this pod, or other similar types of pod.
However, unlike planning activities
or processes, pods cannot be identified by planning forwards from
the current state. Because pods are control systems aimed at achieving
critical goals, they have to be identified by planning backwards from
the critical, future state that they are created to achieve.
In order to understand this approach,
imagine a situation where you need to finalise the terms
of a very substantial order with a client who is situated in a
country of which you had little geographical
knowledge. The meeting has been arranged for 10 a.m. in two days
time. The urgency of the meeting means that you have to plan the
travel arrangements yourself.
Instinctively, in order
to solve the problem, you would probably mentally start at the future
meeting, and try to develop a plan, in reverse order, of the various
services that you would require.
You would
probably start by trying to identify the location of the
client's premises and its proximity to the nearest international
airport.
If
it was relatively close to such
an airport, you would probably assume that you could engage either
a taxi service, or a car hire
service to complete the last leg of your journey. So you would
work on the next problem of identifying airlines that provided services
to the destination airport, which would connect to an airport in
your starting locality and which would arrive at the
destination airport before a critical time of, for example, 9 a.m.
If you had an option of two different airlines, both providing services
that arrived at roughly the same time, you might choose the airline
which, from your past experience, had the best reputation for controlling
their
services to arrive on time.
Although this may again seem an obvious
example, it demonstrates that, in uncertain conditions, in order
to ensure success in achieving a
critical future state, you do not plan forwards
in activities or processes. You have to plan back from the future
critical states, and
identify intelligent services pods that could be created, influenced
or controlled to give the desired degree
of certainty of success. To do this, initially you do not need to
know any details of the internal operational processes that are being
carried out by those services.
However, a slightly closer look, at what
might appear to be such an obvious and common sense way to solve
such problems, starts to uncover the detail of a very powerful approach
to solving all types of problem where the outcome is critical,
but
where there is initially considerable uncertainty surrounding the
solution that could ensure success.
In order to do this, it is important
to understand that, when viewing a pod strategically from the outside,
we are simply interested in the critical interfaces and their relationships.
For example, when considering the international flight service, we
might only be interested in the destination
landing time (the critical output interface of the flight service)
and the related latest check-in time at the departure
airport (the critical
input interface of the flight service).
Being able to identify the pod input
states, which are critical to the certainty of successfully achieving
a specific pod output state, is the essential information we require
in order to connect pods together to create an overall solution
that has the highest certainty of success.
However, in order to solve the travel
problem, we were, probably subconsciously, planning backward paths
for every individual factor that was critical to success.
For example, having identified the most probable pod solution was
an international air
flight, we started
with the critical factor of location. Starting at the location of
the clients premises
we identified the location of the nearest international airport.
Planning backwards, we would have identified the specific airlines
that had
services from the location of a departure airport near to the location
of our home or business. We would then have identified
a complete set of pods that, together, were
able to connect to give a complete path of critical locations, through
which we would have to pass.
Having identified a potential critical
path of locations, we would have to then repeat the
process for the next most critical factor, for example, time. We
would have to do this in order to work out exactly which flight service
would enable us to arrive at the destination by the critical time.
The next set of critical factors we would need to check would be
our ability to make
contracts
with all the critical services or pods. We may be fairly certain
that we could make contracts with taxi services at either end of
our journey, but
we may be less certain of the contract that would enable us to use
the specific flight service we required. If we could not obtain a
ticket because the flight was already full, there may be little point
in arriving at the departure airport before the critical check-in
time.
It is
the various paths of critical contracts that enable us to bind
all the various service pods into an overall
service that will create the future we require. However, a purchase
type of contract is not the only
type of contract that enables us to utilise services
that are in the
control of other people. There are many types of "psychological" contracts
that do not involve the purchase of services. For example, you may
arrive at the destination airport to find that there is a strike
of local taxi drivers. When
you phone
the client to explain the situation, the client may offer to
come
and collect you.
This may not seem much like a traditional
form of contract. Nevertheless, it is in fact an agreement or contract
that can allow you to achieve critical success, by engaging services
that you would be unable to purchase and over which you had no direct
control. Indeed,
in this case, it is a service that has cost no more than the cost
of a phone call, which
would almost certainly
be less than that of the taxi.
In any type of planning, if the certainty
of success is dependent on services that cannot be directly
purchased, but are in the control of people, groups or organisations
over which
you have no direct control, the ability to construct, maintain
and strengthen psychological contracts is one of the most powerful,
but under-utilised, ways of increasing the certainty of success.
Such contracts are often far easier to create than is generally understood.
By working
back from the perceived needs of the other party, it is often a relatively
simple process to identify a Multi-Win situation that can form the
basis of a psychological contract. In the flight example, the client
was presumably prepared to provide an unpaid taxi service because
he considered that the benefit of finalising the order details on-time
was worth the additional effort.
Thus, the concept of "pods",
"paths of critical states" and "contracts" that
are capable of binding the individual pods into an overall effective
service,
ensures that the Perception Dynamics approach to Strategic Planning
is able
to give far more planning power than those planning methodologies
that use simple activities or processes.
Pods are completely scalable, from the
simplest service carried out by a single individual, to complete
organisations or societies. They can represent any type of service. They
provide
the method of
completely integrating operational services, strategies,
performance measures,
control structures, people, processes, skills, motivation, management,
leadership, teams and projects. Pods can be analysed into smaller
pods,
or built up into complete organisational structures of pods.
Using this approach, Strategic Planning
starts with a hypothetical pod, or controlled service, that is capable
of producing the desired future. Each critical area of uncertainty
can be reduced until it is clear that it is possible
to create sub-pods and related contracts that are capable of overcoming
each uncertainty. Each sub-pod
has
a strategic owner who is sufficiently capable of taking ownership
and responsibility for creating an operational pod, which in turn
is capable of achieving success.
Because every pod is connected to another
pod at every critical and measurable interface, complete structures
of intelligent, controlled services can be constructed. This construction
of contracted interfaces eliminates the traditional situation that
allows issues to remain unresolved because they apparently fall into
black holes, where no one feels responsible for having to resolve
them.
Furthermore,
Perception Dynamics identifies different types of pods. Operational
pods fulfil
today's demands of the recipient pods. Strategic pods ensure the
organisation can supply the needs of tomorrow, by creating the
future operational pods with the necessary capabilities. Whilst Leadership
pods have
the capability of finding and contracting owners who are both committed
and sufficiently skilled to create the necessary strategic
pods.
In this way, strategic plans, produced
by the Perception Dynamics approach, can be totally integrated into
the fabric of an organisation. They can be continually monitored
so that corrective actions can be triggered
where necessary to ensure that
the organisation can genuinely achieve the desired, predicted future
state.
Perception Dynamics develops strategic
plans in terms of nouns and adjectives describing the service pods,
owners, paths, critical states and contracts. This contrasts with
the traditional approaches that typically use verbs that describe
activities. By
using such
concepts within the Strategic Planning Process, the
Perception Dynamics approach assists in designing and creating intelligent,
flexible, adaptable, learning and high performing organisations.
If you would like to know more about
how the Perception Dynamics approach can help you to improve performance,
by developing and implementing robust strategic plans, please let
us know your requirements by clicking this email link.
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