Strategic
Planning: Strategic planning determines where an
organization is going over the next year or more, how it’s going to get there
and how it'll know if it got there or not. The focus of a strategic plan is
usually on the entire organization. While the focus of a business plan is
usually on a particular product, service or program.
There are a variety of perspectives,
models and approaches used in strategic planning. The way that a strategic plan
is developed depends on the nature of the organization's leadership, culture of
the organization, complexity of the organization's environment, size of the
organization, expertise of planners, etc.
For example: there are a variety of
strategic planning models, including goals-based, issues-based, organic,
scenario (some would assert that scenario planning is more of a technique than
model), etc.
1) Goals-based planning is probably
the most common and starts with focus on the organization's mission (and vision
and/or values), goals to work toward the mission, strategies to achieve the
goals and action planning (who will do what and by when).
2) Issues-based strategic planning
often starts by examining issues facing the organization, strategies to address
those issues and action plans.
3) Organic strategic planning might
start by articulating the organization's vision and values, and then action
plans to achieve the vision while adhering to those values. Some planners
prefer a particular approach to planning, e.g. appreciative inquiry.
Some, plans are scoped to one year,
many to three years and some to five to ten years into the future. Some plans
include only top-level information and no action plans. Some plans are five to
eight pages long, while others can be considerably longer.
Quite often, an organization's
strategic plan less already know much of what will go into a strategic plan
(this is true for business planning, too). However, development of the
strategic plan greatly helps to clarify the organization's plans and ensure
that key leaders are all "on the same script". Far more important
than the strategic plan document, is the strategic planning process itself.
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