Home arrow Resources arrow Articles arrow Article No. 14 - Strategic Planning (Part 1)
Featured Courses
# Course Days
450 Professional Facilitation (FAST) 5
330 Project Facilitation 3
650 Advanced Facilitation 3
350 Executive Facilitation 2
Alumni Login





Lost Password?
Request An Alumni ID
MG RUSH
1301 W 22nd Street
Suite 603
Oak Brook, Illinois
60523-2015
Inquiries: 630.954.5883
Main: 630.954.5880

Visit our Contact Us page to send us an This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it directly from this site.


 
PMI Registered Education Provider
 

 
 
International Institute of Business Analysts
Endorsed Education Provider

Article No. 14 - Strategic Planning (Part 1) Print

SWIFT Strategic Planning

Strategic planning is often relegated for use at the corporate level only or dropped all together. That is because people think that it requires a lot of time and effort. Good strategic planning can and should be used for corporations, departments, divisions, units, projects, teams, and even individuals. It is simply a process of determining where you want to go and how you will get there.

"Strategic" generally means that it is longer term, i.e., over the next 5 to 10 years or more rather than over the next 5 to 10 months. Corporations often spend months or years developing detailed strategic plans. Effective, workable plans can be developed in a matter of days or weeks -- or even hours in some cases.

First of all, let me establish some basic principles that I follow for a plan. An effective strategic plan should:

  • Be simple, easily communicated, and understandable by those who develop and follow it.
  • Be alive -- never static or "cast in stone".
  • Look out as far as possible -- 10 years or more is appropriate.
  • Constantly evolve without lacking direction. Avoid "getting it perfect".

Some plans, particularly for corporations or major company divisions, require developing detailed information on the current company, industry trends, and competition (called SWOT -- Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats). Done properly, this research is ongoing and feeds the strategic planning process. I'll explore the planning process rather than the research process.

"SWIFT Strategic Planning" means focusing a group of people to develop a strategic plan without taking weeks or months of effort. By building the plan using short, facilitated sessions that "peel away the layers" of the plan, we build highly effective plans without losing group energy.

Here's How

(The rest of the article is viewable only by registered users of this site. Please consider taking our FAST course and become registered to use our Alumni resources on this Web site.)

 
SHARE THIS

What Clients Say
"The staff that I've sent to this training tell me that it's the best and most important training they've received in their professional career."

Read More...

On-line Glossary
Facilitator's Glossary
BE CERTIFIED
CERTIFICATION
FAST, The first and oldest source of facilitation
certification, since 1985.
NEXT FAST CLASS
Our FAST Professional Facilitation Workshop Course - is our most popular class.

Our next OPEN public classes are*:
 
Feb 6 - 10
    Phoenix AZ
Mar 19 - 23
    Chicago IL
May 7 - 11
    Bismarck ND
May 21 - 25
    Houston TX
Jul 9 - 13
    Seattle WA

Click to Register Now

See More Dates

© 2012 Morgan Madison & Company
www.MorganMadison.com