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The five faux pas of strategic planningStrategy is part science (based on fact) and part art (based on ideas). The result is that there is no one right answer. However, there are some wrong ones, and I have listed the five common causes below.
Data can be dangerous If we took all married couples, we would find that the average person has one testicle and one breast (assuming same sex marriages occur equally for men and women). Data can be dangerous - Steve Jobs went for the iPod simply because everyone listened to music, no one had got it right and the market was growing. He even quoted Henry Ford: "If I asked my customer what they wanted they would have just said a faster horse". Strategy is a high-risk endeavour, because it entails predicting the future and I have yet to see "Clairvoyant wins lottery". In addition, as was quoted in The Economist as far back as 1993, and is even more relevant today: "Consultants that compete for giving advice to companies, cannot even agree on the most basic question: what is strategy?" How can a team come together and provide a solution if they don't have a similar 'take' on what strategy is. We then just have a number of disparate opinions that hopefully moves us forward to a solution. I never intended this to become sales spiel, but I seem to have migrated to promoting my course, because it is not possible to fix the problem in an article. 'Strategy in a Day' gets everyone on the same page. Sid Peimer is a freelance strategist resident at www.stratplanning.com. Besides Comstrats overnight, he can also facilitate exciting Brand Days. About Sid PeimerA seasoned and insightful executive with multisector experience in roles as diverse as senior leadership, creative copy and education. I am a qualified pharmacist with an MBA from UCT. I am currently in my second year of PhD studies with CPUT, and a tenured lecturer at Red & Yellow Creative School of Business on the BCom programme. View my profile and articles... |