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Fundamentals of Business Planning

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Title: Fundamentals of Business Planning


1
Fundamentals of Business Planning
  • Professor Steven E. Phelan, PhD

2
AGENDA
  • Review Simulation Results
  • Fundamentals of Planning
  • Goals
  • To understand the relationship between strategy,
    plan, and execution
  • To understand the components of a good plan
  • To assess the strategic readiness of select plans
  • To make the numbers believable
  • Tomorrow Basics of Project management
  • Please install OpenProj (http//openproj.org/openp
    roj)

3
Tools
  • Readings
  • Mintzberg Fall and Rise of Strategic Planning
  • Kaplan/Norton The Office of Strategy Management
  • Kaplan Resource Capacity Planning
  • McGrath/McMillan Discovery-Driven Planning
  • MCI Case

4
Mintzberg on Strategic Planning
  • Observations
  • Strategic planning isnt strategic thinking
  • One is analysis the other is synthesis
  • Real strategic changes requires inventing new
    categories, not rearranging old one
  • Planning is a calculating style of management,
    not a committing style
  • Planning has often been used to exercise blatant
    control over business managers

5
Mintzberg
  • The Fallacies of Strategic Planning
  • Fallacy of Prediction
  • Can planners forecast with any accuracy?
  • Fallacy of Detachment
  • The idea that strategy must be detached from
    operations
  • A strategy can be deliberate or emergent (and
    probably has elements of both)
  • Fallacy of Formalization
  • Formal procedures will never be able to create
    novel strategies
  • Do we think then act or act then think?
    Effectuation logic
  • Should be called strategic programming

6
Mintzberg
  • Planning as Strategic Programming
  • Codification
  • Clarifying strategies in operationally relevant
    terms
  • Elaboration
  • Breaking down the codified strategies into
    projects and action plans (i.e. the non-routine
    aspects of organization)
  • Conversion
  • Restating objectives, reworking budgets,
    reconsidering policies, and standard operating
    procedures (i.e. the routine aspects of
    organization)
  • Benefits
  • Focus, coordination and communication
    (internal/external)

7
Mintzberg
  • Other roles for planners
  • As strategy finders
  • As analysts
  • Carrying out analysis of specific issues
  • The quintessential MBA?
  • As catalysts
  • Getting others to question conventional wisdom
    and think about the future in creative ways

8
THE OFFICE OF STRATEGY MANAGEMENT
  • Kaplan/Norton

9
The Office of Strategy Management
  • Statistics
  • 67 of HR/IT department strategies dont reflect
    corporate strategy
  • 90 of frontline workers not compensated for
    success of strategic priorities
  • 95 of workers dont know or understand the
    strategy
  • 60 of organizations dont link budgets to
    strategies
  • Are you surprised?
  • How big of an issue is this for your organization?

10
OSM
  • Shers view
  • while many people believe that chief executives
    wield direct and easy influence, the reality is
    that any CEO has a difficult time influencing his
    or her organization
  • I want to exert my influence indirectlyI dont
    command any parts of the organization
  • Information, particularly bad news, is filtered
    before it gets to me
  • we were spending way too much time debating the
    quality of information
  • much of management is the search for the truth

11
OSM
  • What good OSMs do
  • The OSM is a facilitating organization, not a
    dictating one (uhuh!)
  • Roles
  • Create and manage balanced scorecard
  • Align the organization (cascade BSCs rare)
  • Facilitate monthly strategy reviews
  • Develop and communicate strategy
  • Manage strategic projects/initiatives
  • Integrate strategic priorities with other depts
  • Budgeting, HR alignment, knowledge mgt

12
MCI Communications
  • Planning for the 1990s

13
MCItimeline
  • Evolution
  • 1960s to 1980 battles with ATT and regulators
  • 1984 decentralization to compete with Baby
    Bells
  • 1986 crisis
  • How did the strategy process evolve over this
    time?

14
MCI
  • 1990s globalization, new technologies,
    sophisticated customers
  • How should MCI alter its strategy processes to
    cope with these growth opportunities?
  • What do you think of the goals in Exhibit 5?

15
Resource Capacity Planning
  • Robert S. Kaplan

16
Resource Capacity Planning
  • MBA assessment issue
  • No concrete data-driven recommendations
  • Linking strategy to operations
  • Typically 90 of corporate spending on routine
    operations (OpEx) vs StratEx
  • Four steps
  • Derive sales forecasts for strategic plan
  • Translate into operating plan
  • Use time-based ABC to forecast resources
  • Derive budgets for operational and capital
    spending (see DA example)

17
DISCOVERY DRIVEN PLANNING
  • McGrath/McMillan

18
Discovery-driven planning
  • New ventures
  • have a high ratio of assumptions to knowledge
  • often deviate from plans because assumptions are
    wrong
  • Traditional planning bakes in assumptions
  • Companies dont have hard data but proceed as if
    assumptions were facts
  • When they do get data they often dont check
    assumptions

19
Discovery-driven planning
  • Reverse income statement
  • Start with required profits
  • We want to generate 100K in additional profit
  • Necessary revenues if 10 sales margin 1m
  • Allowable costs with 10 sales margin 900K
  • Calculate per unit figures
  • Required unit sales at 100 per unit 10,000
  • of market 10 of US market per year
  • Allowable costs per unit 90

20
Next steps
  • Estimate expenses
  • Cost of sales
  • E.g. Unit sales / size of order no. of orders
  • Sales calls per order x handling time no. of
    staff
  • Cost of manufacturing
  • Cost of shipping/warehousing
  • Capital expenditure/depreciation
  • Allows you to identify and track assumptions
  • Plan to test assumptions at milestones with a
    keeper of the assumptions
  • http//faculty.unlv.edu/phelan/MGT709/ShadBusiness
    PlanningModel2005.xls

21
Strategic Readiness Audit
  • You need to analyze your chosen plan for its
    strategic readiness
  • By that I mean the ability to execute on the plan
  • What makes a plan more executable?
  • What ideas have influenced you the most in the
    readings?
  • What things would you look for in a plan?
  • What are some red flags?
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