More thoughts on businesses in transition... or Part Two.
Recently I wrote a blog on businesses in transition and quickly discovered that the topic was much bigger than a 500 to 750 word blog. In the spirit of what I started, this is the second in a series of thoughts on transition.
One of the considerations that I put forward was Business Transition due to internal factors.
As a working definition, this transition and change in the organization is driven by internal activities and initiatives by leadership and employees to build a more viable and successful business. This is the transition that conjures up the images of people like Jack Welsh, Andy Grove or Steve Jobs whose leadership and vision created great companies and brands (not to mention a great PR machine that made them household names in business).
There are a number of elements that are needed to support this type of transition successfully but unfortunately often get forgotten or dismissed when the organization is small, or if the organization is large, can be unwieldy, administratively onerous, or make the organization slow to react to what's happening outside the company.
The first two elements are components of planning; the development of long term and short term plans.
The long term plan looks at the direction of the organization over the next five years... this is the strategic plan that ensures the organization is aligned with its vision, and keeps an eye on longer term goals to ensure short term activities have the evolution of the organization heading in the right direction.
Discipline is needed to ensure that the planning process is part of the business calendar, is properly resourced, and is actively communicated throughout the organization as a priority. Experience has shown that there are two critical components to the planning process:
- A framework and process for planning: This will offer focus, context and a process for thinking when people meet around the table. I have always liked the McKinsey 7s model, and although a little long in the tooth, it has always worked to keep everything on topic and moving forward.
- A facilitator: You need someone designated to manage the planning process and ensure you end up with the deliverables... this also allows leaders the white space to develop their thinking, instead of focusing on the process.
The third element is the review of the people in your organization.
This is extremely important because people "run everything".
The forth element is having robust operating mechanisms to manage the business.
In other words, have a project and meeting calendar to execute the plans, and manage the workings of the business in an organized and on-going way. There is always a balance needed between not enough projects and meetings and having too many projects and meetings; in both cases nothing really gets done. What you are looking for is the perfect number of meetings and projects to successfully get things done... there are two main contributors to being effective, and that is leadership and having the resources available to get things done.
The fifth element is having as much transparent communication as possible.
- Communicate the vision, the plans, what needs to be done, how things are going, etc. as much as possible.
- Work out the mechanisms as to how you are going to get your message out there and as deep into the organization as possible (town halls, quarterly reviews, team meetings, 1:1s)
The six element is a culture of urgency, meritocracy, respect, and curiosity.
This is the formula for success in my experience.
Can any of this guarantee success as you transition your business... unfortunately not. Although, not doing it, can almost guarantee difficultly through the natural transition of a business. And this isn't even before you consider external and revolutionary transition.
Not to worry, we will get to that soon enough.
iamgpe
""""
Articles from Graham🐝 Edwards
View blogDecades of sitting behind desks, in airplanes or in a car has blessed me with very tight hips which, ...
Recently I thought I had reached a level of wisdom that I could offer thoughts on a number of things ...
For those not familiar with a “Word Cloud” it’s the result of a metadata exercise which visualizes t ...
You may be interested in these jobs
-
Développeur React
5 days ago
Shopistry CanadaReact Developer - Saaslify X - Webflow Ecommerce website template Sr. React Developer · Contract Canada Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit vel ut congue varius congue aliquet leo netus neque nibh semper in diam viverra nibh aliquam elit amet orci et dolor, f ...
-
UI/UX designer developer
5 days ago
Shopistry CanadaUI/UX Designer / Developer - Saaslify X - Webflow Ecommerce website template UI/UX Designer / Developer · Full time Canada Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit vel ut congue varius congue aliquet leo netus neque nibh semper in diam viverra nibh aliquam elit am ...
-
paper converting supervisor
5 days ago
International paper Converters Limited Vaughan, CanadaEducation: Secondary (high) school graduation certificate · Experience: 2 years to less than 3 years · Work setting · Planing mill · Waferboard plant · Paper converting company · Pulp and paper mill · Sawmill · Tasks · Ensure that systems and equipment are operating efficiently a ...
Comments
Graham🐝 Edwards
7 years ago #1
Thanks Ren\u00e9e Cormier. Look forward to your next post.