Which Strategic Plan is Right for You?

Social TrendSpotter
5 min readDec 10, 2020

--

photo courtesy of DepositPhotos

While there are numerous books and websites on strategic planning, the process of developing a plan can seem prescriptive. But, it shouldn’t be that way. Strategy for any organization can be tailored to set forth the ways in which an organization will negotiate its environment to attain a competitive advantage. A strategic plan determines how the organization is going to undertake this strategy — at all levels of the organization in a sustainable fashion — over a pre-determined time period. However, strategic planning is not a “one-size-fits-all” process because all organizations are different — they are at different phases in the lifecycle and their histories, focused on different issue areas and experiencing outside influences more or less intensively.

We have spoken a lot about how to best pursue a strategic plan. But something was still missing. We found that we needed different types of strategic plans in order to directly address our clients’ unique needs within their competitive environments. Our experience has shown us that determining which type (or types, since they can be blended) of strategic plan is needed for an organization is both art and science. As you move forward in your strategic planning efforts in 2021, we encourage you to reference the information below to chart the best course for your organization:

Action Plan

  • Focused on initiation — getting the right things done in the right order
  • Created when launching an organization to ensure smart decision-making or when recalibration is needed for an existing organization to perform a quick jumpstart

For start-up organizations or those that have operated without a strategic plan in the past, a quick one-year action plan can be very helpful for building the discipline around planning without dealing with a complicated and often costly process. We also use action plans as a tool to start new ventures or new objectives within an existing strategic plan.

Foundational Plan

  • Focused on stability — either in operations or transition
  • Created when an organization has hit a “limit to growth” due to operational and/or staffing constraints
  • Typically done when growth is on the horizon for next plan

When business experts looked at Fortune 500 companies that have been around for a century or more, they noted that these companies cycle back and forth successfully between two phases — growth (see transformational below) and plateau. Plateauing doesn’t mean the organization isn’t growing, but it does mean that it is focused on building up foundational infrastructure and correcting “growing pains” before it hits another phase of growth. Organizations need this downbeat to take stock and ensure that operational areas are functioning at their maximum levels of efficiency based on best practices.

Bridge Plan

  • Focused on extending existing strategic plan
  • Created when uncertainty in future funding or leadership exists and a new strategic plan is not yet plausible
  • Requires review of results of existing plan as well as new areas to include

Many of our clients who had been planning to start a strategic planning process in 2020 course-corrected once the pandemic hit and decided to use a shorter-term “bridge plan.” Because of the many unknowns on the horizon and the extra work associated with meeting community needs during the pandemic, a bridge plan was the perfect way to focus on strategic issues without overtaxing the organization or making unrealistic plans due to the unknowns of 2020.

Transformational Plan — Growth or Evolutionary

  • Focused on growth — either in programming or geography
  • Created when an organization or community needs to go to the next level
  • Requires operational elements to be relatively stable and mature
  • Requires community assessment of need

For many years, strategic plans were synonymous with a transformational strategic plan. However, we have found in our practice that growth, especially in the traditional for-profit sense of “growing bigger,” isn’t always the right answer in the nonprofit space. Nonprofits have two types of growth: 1) growing wide (larger geography, more programs) or 2) growing deep (getting better at what you are already doing). Both have merit but require different litmus tests. A transformational strategic plan asks why the problem exists and, more importantly, persists, and what your organization can uniquely do to solve it. We have also found that there are two kinds of transformational plans: 1) growth transformational planning, which forecasts trends and charts the best course forward for growth of the organization, and 2) evolutionary transformational planning, which sets the trend and often redefines an industry and the organization’s competitive advantage within the community. To put this into more concrete terms, growth planning is about taking a larger piece of the pie and evolutionary planning is about growing the pie (or changing the recipe).

Turnaround or “Right-Sizing” Plan

  • Focused on continuity — “right-sizing” mission with financials
  • Created when an organization has hit the decline phase in the organizational lifecycle and needs swift action
  • Requires competitive and community assessment

While the name alone makes it hard to talk about, many nonprofits right now need to consider a turnaround plan — not necessarily due to poor management, but due to the external forces complicating our collective work. Instead of turnaround, we often use the word “right-sizing” to describe this plan. Due to financial challenges as a result of the pandemic, many nonprofits need to retrench, consolidate and experience a rebirth. As with any rebirth, sometimes the resulting organization can be leaner and better able to tackle issues more creatively.

click to enlarge image

While we often look at these types of plans separately, they can often be blended together or used to define a given year. For example, we are working with a large nonprofit now on strategic planning where they are “right-sizing” their mission in certain areas but are taking a more transformational growth mode in others. Another nonprofit did a bridge plan for 2020–2021 and has been using “bridge” as a theme for the year.

We hope you have enjoyed this breakdown of different strategic planning types. We would love to hear your reactions to them, especially as you plan for 2021.

--

--

Social TrendSpotter
Social TrendSpotter

Written by Social TrendSpotter

Features bite-size posts providing the latest trends and ideas within social sector. Place to be inspired, cross-pollinate, and provoke new thinking.

No responses yet