A Societal Value-Added Perspective and Frame of Mind[i]
Adding value to
our shared society, using your organization as the primary vehicle is
Mega thinking and planning. It is straight-forward, and sensible. From this
shared societal value-added frame, everything one uses, does, produces, and
delivers is linked to deliver shared and agreed-upon positive organizational
as well as societal results.
This societal
frame of reference, or paradigm, I call the Mega
level of thinking and planning. If you are not adding value to our shared
society you have no assurance that you are not subtracting value. Starting
with Mega as the central focus is strategic thinking and provides the data
based for strategic planning.
A central question that every organization
should ask and answer is:
If
Your Organization is the Solution, What’s the Problem?
This fundamental
proposition—using a Mega focus—represents a shift from the usual attention
only on oneself, individual performance improvement, and one’s organization to
making certain you also add value to external clients and society.
An Overview of the Basic Concepts and Tools for
Mega Thinking and Planning
There are three
basic guides, or templates, that help define and achieve individual and
organizational success. Each is provided in much greater detail in several
books (see the references), but for our entry into Mega Planning and strategic
thinking, following is the short introduction to these three guides.
Guide One: The Organizational Elements Model (OEM)
It is important
to define and link (align) what any organization uses, does, produces, and
delivers to achieve external client and societal value added. A tool for making
sure that everything an organization, uses, does, produces, and delivers does
add value to external clients and society is called the Organizational Elements Model (OEM) and is shown in Table 1.[1] For each Element, there is an associated
level of planning: strategic planning
(and thinking) starts with Mega while tactical
planning starts with Macro and operational planning at Micro.
These elements
are also useful for defining the basic questions every organization must ask
and answer as provided in Figure 3.
Name
of the Organizational Element
|
Name
of the Level of Planning and Focus
|
Brief Description
|
Type of Planning
|
Outcomes
|
Mega
|
Results and their consequences for external
clients and society (shared Ideal Vision)
|
Strategic[2]
|
Outputs
|
Macro
|
The results an organization can or does deliver
outside of itself
|
Tactical
|
Products
|
Micro
|
The building block results that are produced
within the organization
|
Operational
|
Processes
|
Process
|
The ways, means, activities, procedures,
projects, methods used internally
|
|
Inputs
|
Input
|
The human, physical, financial resources an
organization can or does use
|
Table 1. The five levels of results, the
levels of planning, and a brief description.
These elements are also useful for defining the
basic questions every organization must ask and answer as provided in Figure 3.
Guide Two: Six Critical Success Factors
Following are
what provides an essential framework of this approach and for Mega planning.
Unlike conventional “critical success factors,” these are factors for
successful planning, not just for the things that an organization must get done
to meet its mission. These are for Mega planning, regardless of the
organization.
The Six Critical
Success Factors for Mega thinking and planning are shown in Figure 1. Unlike
many other presentations of critical success factors, these relate to any
organization public or private. Most “critical success factors” discussed in
the management literature refer to organization-specific factors related to
their unique business. These apply to any organization and are “above” any
organizational-specific factors.
FIGURE 1. THE SIX CRITICAL FACTORS
FOR MEGA THINKING AND PLANNING
Guide Three: A
six-step problem solving model,
A process for
getting from What Is to What Should Be is shown in Figure 2. These functions
include: (1.0) identifying problems based on needs, (2.0) determining detailed
solution requirements and identifying (but not yet selecting) solution
alternatives, (3.0) selecting solutions from among alternatives, (4.0)
implementation, (5.0) evaluation and (6.0) continuous improvement (at each and
every step):
FIGURE 2. THE SIX-STEP PROBLEM
SOLVING PROCESS: A PROCESS FOR IDENTIFYING AND RESOLVING PROBLEMS AND
IDENTIFYING OPPORTUNITIES (Adapted from Kaufman(1992, 1998,
2000, 2006a, b,)
Each
time you want to identify opportunities and resolve problems systematically
get from current results and consequences to desired ones, use the six-step
process.
This Six-step process In Figure 1 (Based in part on Kaufman, 1992,
1998, 2000, 2006) below allows the identification of opportunities before
immediately moving to solve problems. The Mega thinking and planning approach
does not assume that improving performance with the existing situation is
automatically useful. Often, an organization can improve performance only to later
discover that the performance in question does not add measurable value to the
organization or to the shared society.
To be
successful—to do and apply Mega Planning—you have to realize that yesterday’s
methods and results often are not appropriate for tomorrow. Most planning
experts agree that the past is only prologue, and tomorrow must be crafted
through new patterns of perspectives, tools, and results. The tools and
concepts for meeting the new realities of society, organizations, and people are
linked to each of the Six Critical Success Factors.
The details and
how-to’s for each of the three guides are also provided in the referenced
sources. The three basic “guides” or templates should be considered as forming
an integrated set of tools—like a fabric—instead of only each one on their own.
A Mega Planning
framework has three phases:
·
Scoping,
·
Planning, and
·
Implementation/Continual Improvement.
During the
Scoping phase, one may find opportunities that were not readily apparent from
most reactive problem solving approaches to strategic planning. From this
framework, specific tools and methods are provided to do Mega Planning. It is
not complex, really. If you simply use the three guides you will be able to put
it all together.
When doing Mega
planning, you and your associates will ask and answer the following questions
shown in Figure 3. This also identifies the Organizational Elements in terms of
the questions you and your organization should (and must) ask and answer:
FIGURE
3. THE BASIC QUESTIONS EVERY ORGANIZATION MUST ASK AND ANSWER (BASED ON KAUFMAN 2006a)
A “yes” to all
questions will deliver Mega planning and allow you to prove that you have added
value. . . something that is becoming increasingly important. These questions
relate to Guide One that defines each organizational element in terms of its
label and the question each addresses. If you use and do all of these you will
align everything you use, do, produce, and deliver to adding measurable value
to yourself, your organization, and to external clients and society.
Mega planning is proactive. Many approaches to
organizational improvement wait for problems to happen and then hastily
respond. But there is a temptation to react to problems and never take the time
to plan so surprises are fewer and success is defined—before problems spring
up—and then systematically achieved.
The Six Critical Success Factors in Brief
Examining each
of the Six Critical Success Factors –Guide Three --to get a sense for the frame
of mind (or paradigm) Mega planning provides.
Critical Success Factor 1. Don’t assume that worked
before will work now.
Don’t assume that which worked for you and others
in the past will work in the future. There is evidence just about everywhere
we look that tomorrow is not a linear projection—a straight-line function—of
yesterday and today. Examples include car manufacturers that squander their
dominant client base by shoving unacceptable vehicles into the market and
airlines that focus on shareholder value and ignore customer value. An
increasing number of credible authors have been, and continue to tell us that
the past is, at best, prologue and not a harbinger of what the future will be.
In fact, old paradigms can be so deceptive that Tom Peters (1997) suggests
that “organizational forgetting” must become conventional organizational
culture.
Times have changed, and anyone who doesn’t also
change appropriately is risking failure. It is vital to use new and wider
boundaries for thinking, planning, doing, and delivering. Doing so will
require getting out of current comfort zones. Not doing so will likely deliver
failure.
Critical Success Factor 2: Use an Ideal Vision
(Mega) as the underlying basis for all strategic think, planning, and doing
(Don’t Be Limited to Your Own Organization)
Here is another
area that requires some change from the conventional ways of doing planning.
This Ideal Vision is identical for all organizations, public and private. One
planning for one’s organization, simply identify which of the variables they
commit to deliver and move ever-closer toward.
An Ideal Vision,
Exhibit 1, identifies the kind of world we want to help create for tomorrow's
child. It identifies measurable variables that can be used to (1) identify
needs at the Mega/societal level, (2) provide measurable criteria for an
organization’s mission, and (3) assure that everything an organization uses,
does, produces, and delivers will add measurable value to all stakeholders.
EXHIBIT 1. THE IDEAL VISION (KAUFMAN, 2006)
There
will be no loss of life or elimination of the survival of any species
required for human survival. There
will be no reductions in levels of self-sufficiency, quality of life
livelihood, or loss of property from any source including:
There is a
“gap” between what it is and what it should be
ü war and/or riot and/or terrorism
ü shelter
ü unintended human-caused changes to the environment including permanent
destruction of the environment and/or
rendering it non-renewable
ü murder, rape, or crimes of
violence, robbery, or destruction to property
ü substance abuse
ü disease
ü pollution
ü starvation and/or malnutrition
ü child abuse
ü partner/spouse abuse
ü accidents, including transportation, home, and business/workplace.
ü discrimination based on
irrelevant variables including color, race, creed, sex, religion, national
origin, age, location
ü Poverty will not exist, and every woman and man will earn as least as
much as it costs them to live unless they are progressing toward being self‑sufficient
and self‑reliant
ü No adult will be under the care,
custody or control of another person, agency, or substance: all adult
citizens will be self-sufficient and self‑reliant as minimally indicated by
their consumption being equal to or less than their production.
Consequences
of the Basic Ideal Vision: Any and all
organizations--public and private--will contribute to the achievement and
maintenance of this Basic Ideal Vision and will be funded and continued to
the extent to which it meets its objectives and the Basic Ideal Vision is
accomplished and maintained.
People will
be responsible for what they use, do, and contribute and thus will not
contribute to the reduction of any of the results identified in this basic
Ideal Vision.
From this societal-linked
Ideal Vision, each organization can identify what part or parts of the Ideal
Vision they commit to deliver and move ever-closer toward. If we base all
planning and doing anchored on the Ideal Vision of the kind of society we want
for future generation, we can achieve “strategic alignment” for what we use,
do, produce, deliver, and the external payoffs for our Outputs.
The Ideal/Mega
Vision is not the same as design and development but simply provides a “North
Star” toward which everyone in the organization can develop their products and
steer closer toward. On very simple decision criteria and time a decision to be
made is objectively ask and answer will
this take us closer or further away from Mega?
Mega thinking
and planning is about defining a shared success, achieving it, and being able
to prove it. Mega thinking and planning is a focus not on one’s organization
alone but upon society now and in the future. It is about adding measurable
value to all stakeholders. (Mega thinking and planning is not a tool for the
actual design, development, implementation, and evaluation of organizational
effectiveness but rather for scoping and setting requirements and for checking
on measurable contributions and alignment. The operational analysis, design,
development, implementation, and evaluation/continual improvement is best done
by a number of excellent models and approaches, such as Bernardez, 2006a,2006b;
Brethower, 2006; Gilbert, 1978; Guerra, 2003; Kaufman, R., Guerra, I., and
Platt, W. A. ,2006; Rummler 2004; Watkins, 2007, among others.)
Mega thinking
and planning has been offered for many years, perhaps first formally with
Kaufman, 1972 and further developed in Kaufman & English, 1979, and
continuing through this article. In one form another, using a societal frame
for planning and doing has shown up in the works of other respected thinkers,
including Senge (1990) and more recently Prahalad (2005) and Davis (2005). And
this concept was introduced by Kaufman, Corrigan, & Johnson,1969 .
Appropriately,
there seems to be a lessening of resistance to Mega thinking and planning;
there continues a migration from individual performance as the preferred unit
of analysis for performance improvement to one that includes a first
consideration of society and external stakeholders; It is responsible,
responsive, and ethical to add value to all.
Critical Success Factor 3. Differentiate between
Ends and Means
Focus on “what” (mega/outcomes, macro/outputs, micro/products) before
“how.” People are “doing-types.” We want to swing right into action and in so
doing we usually jump right into solutions (means) before we know the results
(ends) we must deliver. Writing and using measurable performance objectives is
something upon which almost all performance improvement authors agree. Objectives
correctly focus on ends and not methods, means, or resources.
Ends—“What”—sensibly should be identified and
defined before we select “How” to get from where we are to our destinations.
If we don’t select our solutions, methods, resources, and interventions on the
basis of what results we are to achieve, what do we have in mind to make the
selections of means, resources, or activities?
Focusing on means, processes, and activities is usually more comfortable
as a starting place for conventional performance improvement initiatives.
Starting with means, for any organization and performance improvement
initiative, would be as if you were provided process tools and techniques
without a clear map that included a definite destination identified (along with
a statement of why you want to get to the destination in the first place).
Also, a risk for starting a performance improvement journey with means and
processes would be the fact that there would be no way of knowing whether your
trip is taking you toward a useful destination or the criteria for telling you
if you were making progress.
It is vital that successful planning focuses first on results (and not
“how”)—useful performance in measurable terms—for setting its purposes,
measuring progress and providing continuous improvement toward the important
results, and for determining what to keep, what to fix, and what to abandon.
This rigorous base sets the stage for another related Critical Success Factor 3
(Use and Link all Three Levels of Results) through application of the Organizational
Elements Model (OEM) and for Critical Success Factor 4 (Prepare objectives that
have indicators of how you will know when you have arrived). The OEM relies on
a results-focus because it defines what every organization uses, does,
produces, delivers, and the consequences of that for external clients and
society.
Critical Success Factor 4: Prepare
objectives—including those for the Ideal Vision (Mega) and the mission that
have rigorous indicators to tell if you have arrived at your intended
destination.
It is vital to
state, precisely, measurable, and rigorously, where you are headed and how to
tell when you have arrived.[3]
Statements of
objectives must be in performance terms so that one can plan how best to get
there, how to measure progress toward it. And everything is measurable, in
spite of conventional wisdom, so don’t deceive yourself into thinking you can
dismiss important results as being “intangible” or “non-measurable.” [4]
Increasingly organizations throughout the world are increasingly focusing on
Mega-level results.[5]
Objectives, at
all levels of planning, activity, and results, are absolutely vital. And
everything is measurable, so don’t kid yourself into thinking you can dismiss
important results as being “intangible” or “non-measurable.” It is only
sensible and rational to make a commitment to measurable purposes and destinations.
Organizations throughout the world are increasingly focusing on Mega-level
results
Critical Success Factor 5: Use and Align all three
levels of Planning and Results.
As we noted in Critical Success Factor 2, it is vital to prepare all objectives
that focus only on ends; never just on means or resources. There are three
levels of results, shown in Table 2, that are important to target and link.
There are three levels of planning and results, based on who is to be
the primary client and beneficiary of what gets planned, designed, and
delivered. For each level of planning there are three associated levels of
results (Mega/Outcomes, Macro/Outputs, Micro/Products).
PRIMARY CLIENT AND
BENEFICIARY
|
NAME FOR THE LEVEL OF PLANNING
|
NAME FOR THE LEVEL OF
RESULT
|
TYPE OF PLANNING
|
Society and
External Clients
|
Mega
|
Outcomes
|
Strategic
|
The
Organization Itself
|
Macro
|
Outputs
|
Tactical
|
Individuals
and Small Groups
|
Micro
|
Products
|
Operational
|
Table 2. The levels of planning and results that
should be linked during planning, doing, and evaluation and continuous
improvement and there are three levels of planning.
Critical Success Factor 6: Define “need” as a gap
between current and desired results (Not as Insufficient Levels of Resources,
Means, or Methods).
Conventional
English-language usage would have us employ the common world “need” as a verb
(or in a verb sense) .to identify means, methods, activities, and actions
and/or resources we desire or intend to use.[6]
Terms such as “need to,” “need for,” “needing,” and “needed” are common,
conventional, and destructive to useful planning. What? [7]
We have already
noted this as Critical Success Factor 2. In order to do reasonable and
justifiable planning we have to (1) focus on Ends and not Means, and thus (2)
use “need” as a noun. Need, for the sake of useful and successful planning is
only used as a noun, as a gap between current and desired results.
If we use need as a noun, we will be able to not
only justify useful objectives but we will also be able to justify what we do
and deliver on the basis of costs-consequences analysis. We will be able to
justify everything we use, do, produce, and deliver. It is the only sensible
way we can demonstrate value added.[8]
[1] It should be noted that
the OEM is useful for making sure there is inclusion of each factor in
organizational success; it does not actually do the alignment.
[2] These definitions of strategic and tactical are different from other conventional usage. I suggest
that defining “strategic” as adding value to society and “tactical” as defining
the best ways and means to achieve societal results is more pragmatic and
encourages planners to justify any organizational mission in terms of Mega.
[3] An important contribution of strategic planning at
the Mega level is that objectives can be linked to justifiable purpose. Not
only should one have objectives that state “where you are headed and how you
will know when you have arrived,” they should also be justified on the basis of
“why you want to get to where you are headed.” While it is true that objectives
only deal with measurable destinations, useful strategic planning adds the
reasons why objectives should be attained.
[4] There are four scales of measurement: nominal,
ordinal, interval, and ratio. If you can’t name it, how do you know it even
exists?
[5] Cf. Kaufman, Watkins, Triner, & Stith,
1998:Summer, and Davis, 2005.
[6] Because most dictionaries provide common usage not
necessarily correct usage, they note that "need” is used as a noun as well
as a verb. This dual conventional usage doesn’t mean that it is useful. Much of
this book depends on a shift in paradigms about “need.” The shift is to use it
only as a noun . . . never as a verb or in a verb sense.
[7] As hard as it is to change our own behavior (and most
of us who want others to change seem to resist it the most ourselves!) it is
central to useful planning to distinguish between Ends and Means.
[8] Sloppy word usage is comfortable but deceptive. How
can one justify a statement “we ‘need’ to do a needs assessment” when the only
practical needs assessment is about gaps in results, not gaps in means or
resources. Words have meaning and using the same word as a noun and as a verb
doesn’t model what a true needs assessment is.
[i]
This approach is
valid in both bad and good economic times, although crises often allows one the
opportunity to change planning and thinking paradigms.
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