Make your strategy work
Even the most brilliant strategy is worth nothing if it isn't
executed well, especially by your front line - the employees who
interact daily with customers.
Unfortunately, these employees are regularly asked to execute
strategies that others have developed and which they may not understand,
or feel committed or connected to.
Developing good strategy involves a lot of hard work, but it's not
where things tend to go wrong. In business, even the most robustly
designed and painstakingly planned strategies can fail. Even worse, it
is often the blindingly obvious that can trip you. This is relevant for
any business, of any size, in any sector.
To make the strategy work, firstly, all employees must believe in the
strategy as strongly as the CEO does, and behave in line with it. And
finally, they must be willing to explain the strategy and its
implications to any doubters within the company.
Communication
Putting up with a sub-par or a mediocre team will make your strategy
unachievable or sub-optimised at best. Companies should prioritise to go
after the best people and then motivate them to do extraordinary things.
Focusing on management is usually the best place to start in any
strategy. Getting people to buy into your strategy makes it easier to
implement and to implement it well. Communication is, therefore,
critical, and keeping it simple but convincing, pays dividends.
Increasingly, enterprises need an enduring purpose to inspire and
motivate their people. The whole team needs to know that what they do
matters to the company.
The heart and soul of execution is accountability - it motivates
people to follow through on their commitments. It is essential to be
clear regarding who is responsible for what, and that accountability is
tied to results, not activities.
This is essential because, while activity within an organisation is
unceasing, it is only results that really matter.
Create bold plans, hire the best people to implement them, pursue a
focused strategy in a consistent, single-minded way and move and adapt
rapidly.
A leader's ability to do this is directly linked to the quality and
single-mindedness of the top team - if they consistently believe in and
implement the strategy, there is a good chance pitfalls will be avoided.
Eliminate doubters
To successfully implement strategy there is also a need to expunge
confirmed doubters, as their cynical attitude towards the strategy can
spread and become toxic, making implementation more difficult and
expensive.
The doubter can also be a bad role model for his or her juniors,
radiating scepticism throughout the company. They may be good and
effective employees, but if they're getting in the way of strategy
execution it is critical they be moved to less integral roles. Or, in
more extreme cases, a CEO may find it necessary to manage a few
high-profile dismissals. |