2 min read

Is Your Strategy Being Hijacked?

Is Your Strategy Being Hijacked?

In their Harvard Business Review article, Don’t Let Metrics Undermine Your Business, authors Michael Harris and Bill Tayler explore this question by taking a close look at how Wells Fargo’s strategy development and plan execution may have been a factor in enabling the horrible sales practices that cost it billions and possibly permanently tarnished its brand. This examination identifies a gap between the corporate strategic goal of increasing cross-selling and a compensation program built on sales incentives that apparently left their teams to fill in how best to achieve company and personal objectives.

what is surrogation?The authors call this rouge planning surrogation.

I call it building a plan that is nothing more than an air sandwich, where big goals are the pretty top bun, and the current operations, competencies, and priorities are the fat bottom bun, and there is nothing in between.

We often see poorly fleshed-out strategic thinking in organizations, especially when leadership teams have an underdeveloped view of developing strategic thinking and poor strategic management practices.

In their article, Harris and Tayler discuss the causes of surrogation and how to mitigate the obsession with numbers while strengthening the strategic thinking needed to successfully move from strategy development to plan execution. Their primary recommendation is to involve the people responsible for implementation in the strategy development process.

To lessen the risk of surrogation, they recommend leaders open their planning forums up to larger groups of people and allow them to gain a deeper understanding of the goals and rationale for goals.  Through their participation in the strategy development process, they gain a more comprehensive understanding of the what and whys of a strategic plan and, because of their implementation focus, a deeper understanding of the boundaries and constraints for how to act in alignment with long-term goals.  They are offered the opportunity to see past the numbers.

This article makes a great deal of sense.

But for many leadership teams, the prospect of opening their long-range planning efforts to more folks sounds unmanageable, chaotic, and potentially frustrating or unproductive. 

From our 20 years of conducting large group strategic planning processes, we know they can be highly productive, well-managed, and produce results ahead of plan. But the way you structure your planning must change.

Here are three articles that will give you ample insight into modifying your next planning effort to reduce the risk of surrogation that could undermine future success.

  1. To ensure your planning process includes all four steps required to ensure you have a full strategy developed – no air sandwich, READ COMBAT EPIC STRATEGY FAILURE-COMPLETE STRATEGY DEVELOPMENT
  2. To engage your brilliant tacticians in strategic planning, READ ARE TACTICIANS AN OBSTACLE IN STRATEGY DEVELOPMENT?
  3. To ensure you are looking past your numbers and integrating external factors into your planning, READ CAN’T PROBLEM-SOLVE YOUR WAY TO AN EPIC STRATEGY

Sign up for our mailing list for more tips and tools to guide strategy development and strengthen strategic thinking in your organization. You’ll receive new articles, tools, and training announcements right in your inbox.

OR 

Reach out to us to help with your next planning effort.

 

Is Your Organization A Strategy Killer?

Is Your Organization A Strategy Killer?

As a strategist I am extremely fortunate to spend the majority of my time working with clients to shape their ideas into new strategies to achieve...

Read More
Your Vision: Step 2 to your epic strategy

Your Vision: Step 2 to your epic strategy

A great strategy is a great story. Based on the story of the hero’s journey, in my first article, 3 Essential Elements to Epic Strategy, I introduced...

Read More
Does your strategic planning have a missing piece?

Does your strategic planning have a missing piece?

Shel Silverstein’s book, The Missing Piece has been a favorite of mine since I was a little girl. I still have a copy and love sharing it with...

Read More
Business Innovation Brief