Public Sector Strategy Book
Public Sector Strategy Book
Public Sector Strategy Book
Strategy
Graham Godbee
Public Sector Strategy:
How to really work smarter
Contents Page
Preface i
The ideas and tools presented in this book have evolved over many years of
teaching and practicing strategy in the public sector.
For thirty years, I was consulting and teaching strategy in Australia and
overseas to corporations and MBA students. Teaching a subject forces the
teacher to really know the subject!
But most of these activities were in the business sector where the profit
motive was clear and strong. While there was the complexity of
competition, there was also an obvious goal to make outstanding profits.
Such a goal gives ready clarity and focus for strategic direction. The
business sector also has a ready-made measurement system: accounting
exists mainly to measure performance in monetary terms. That is profit –
the bottom line of the income statement.
Today, the public sector is a major part of our society and is growing in
importance. The public sector is also being given more complex and
challenging tasks than ever before. This is our third dimension of
strategy.
There is, of course, considerable variation within the public sector: between
the levels of Government (local, State, Federal) and between Departments
i
and between Government enterprises and so on. However, there are also
similarities and we present general tools which then can be modified when
applied to specific cases.
There have been attempts to transfer migrate military and business strategy
models and concepts across to the public sector sphere. Some have worked
well and others poorly. Strategy in the public sector is generally far more
complex than, and is certainly different to, strategy in the military and
business dimensions. We need to specifically consider strategy in the public
sector.
Over time I was doing more training and consulting on strategy in the
public sector. There was some early work done with the NSW Police
although they were initially interested in learning how to apply commercial
concepts in their activities against criminals who were motivated by the
profit motive.
As well, the tasks of managers in these sectors are far more socially
complex than challenges faced by managers in the private or business
sector. Time frames are generally more extended too, making the devising
of strategy both more critical and more effectual.
ii
Meanwhile, both government and charity agencies now face more
competition than ever. This is not just competition in servicing clients
whether it is schools or jails or roads or disability services or employment
services or whatever. There is also competition for funds and other limited
resources. Rarely do we have the luxury of resourcing to our desires.
In the lead up to both the 2013 and 2016 federal elections, both
Governments had to admit that the budget deficit had blown about by
another $12 billion or so from the estimates just weeks earlier. How was
the Government going to redress this blow out and move back to its
promised budget surplus in a few years?
Easy! One of the measures was to increase the public sector efficiency
dividend from 1.25% to 2.25%. Problem solved at the stroke of a pen!
Abbott reduced the dividend on coming to office but Turnbull reinstated it
when he needed to fill a hole. Again, public servants were to do even more
with less.
There is not just a credibility gap in this response but also an intellectual
and application gap. How do we work smarter?
We have pushes for greater efficiency. This means doing more with less:
greater output from fewer staff and other resources. This means working
harder rather than working smarter.
Both businesses and public sector organisations can usually pick up some
operational improvements to increase efficiency. Almost without exception
though, such improvements are marginal. We might pick up a few
percentage points of improvement over time.
The big gains come from being effective. Doing what we should and
discarding the superfluous. Being effective requires insightful analysis,
superb strategy, proper planning and diligent delivery.
iii
Most public sector managers are practiced at planning and they often
perform miracles on delivering results with limited resources. But the
demands are growing beyond what these operational capabilities can
deliver.
Our aim is to get the thinking right, to put the ―strategic‖ into
―strategic planning‖.
We need to develop coherent and creative strategies that will deal with the
situation given our capabilities in order to achieve the desired results and
outcomes.
The lack of tools to assist in the analysis and formulation of strategy in the
public sector is disappointing and frustrating.
There are either few tools available or else there are just cosmetic
renovations of business models that prove inadequate in the more complex
world of the public sector.
Certainly strategy and its processes is a complex field of study. The book
aims to make this study accessible and to be practical and of use. At the end
of each chapter, there is a Key Points summary section to help organise
your thinking.
This is a guide book. It takes you, the reader, through the wilderness to
your destination swiftly and surely while enjoying your journey.
There is a pedagogy or logical sequence to the book, if you have the time
and interest to read through the book.
You can freely skim through introductory parts to gain a feel for the
background and order of thought until you delve in detail at the section of
interest.
This book provides tools and processes to move towards achieving your
mission by working smarter. All you need to apply is intelligence, skills,
experience, determination, sensitivity, courage ………….
v
About the author
Graham Godbee has been a teacher, economist, finance manager,
marketing manager, university lecturer, director, consultant, father and
bottle washer.
He then spent some time in a large publicly listed company and found
bureaucracy is not the sole preserve of the public sector. But the profit
motive certainly provided focus to actions.
These experiences led to developing many of the ideas, models and tools to
be found in this book.
vi
1. Strategy and the Public Sector
2
The ―father of modern military strategy‖ is
often referred to as Carl Philipp Gottfried von
Clausewitz (1780-1831). A Prussian soldier and
theorist, he helped reform the Prussian army.
This definition puts military strategy as just one of the means towards
political ends.
Thus military strategy becomes a subset of the grand strategy, where the
entire nation is mobilised to achieve the goals. In this environment, much
of military strategy is reduced to operational strategy. With technological
advances in communication and politicisation of military forces, grand
strategy and operational strategy have tended to merge and be blurred in
recent times.
Until recent years, public sector strategy has achieved scant attention in the
academic arena. The focus has been on business strategy instead.
3
microeconomics digestible for business executives. Actually, he brought
clarity to the understanding of industry forces and the likely intensity of
competition and industry attractiveness (as measured by profitability for the
incumbents). This was espoused by ―Porter‘s Five Forces‖: internal rivalry;
new entrants; substitutes; suppliers; and buyers.
The public sector has not fared well in most publications. The standard
European strategy text is ―Exploring Corporate Strategy‖ by Johnson and
Scholes. The combined references for the public and not-for-profit sectors
are in two pages.
4
Public sector strategy is increasingly relevant due to four major
developments. These developments are evidenced in the following sections.
Issues such as global warming, the need for carbon taxes and unsustainable
land use highlight the failure of the private sector to adequately account for
public goods or intergenerational equity when it looks at the bottom line of
the Income Statement, i.e. annual profit.
There have been pushes for corporate triple bottom line reporting, where
the effect on the community and on the environment are also considered.
Generally, such considerations have had little influence on business
decisions. Much of the argument by big business for a trebling of
Australia‘s population seems to have more to do with easily gaining sales
5
and profit growth this generation with little consideration of quality of life
for future generations.
The global recession from 2007 (mainly in Australia is it called the global
financial crisis) once again showed the need for the public sector to mollify
the excesses of the private sector and the ―greed is good‖ mentality. In
America, banks, car manufacturers and others paraded their propensity to
privatise the profits while wanting to socialise the losses as they sought bail
outs, hand outs and cop outs from the public purse.
A second trend was that public sector activities would balloon [their term].
Much of this is due to aging populations:
6
Change in Japan’s population over the age of 75 from 2005 to 2015: 36%
Increase in tax burden needed to maintain current benefit levels for
Japan‘s future generation: 175%
On the opposite side of the world, France is facing civil unrest as it seeks to
raise the retirement age to 62 in order to cope with its aging population.
The bulge as our baby boomers move through their life cycle is well known
as shown below. But we should not ignore the following generations. From
2010, so called Generation Y had begun to outnumber the baby boomers.
7
It is factors such as longer life expectancy (mortality dropping) that lead to
economic concerns as we try to accommodate the health and other needs of
an aging population with a reduced work force.
Source: ABS
We should be aware that averages often hide some disturbing local issues:
for example what services we need to provide our youthful indigenous
population or the low life expectancy of the indigenous population (the
points are linked).
8
There are also issues with aging rural communities and the average age of
our farmers. In 2012, the National Farmers Federation estimated the
average of Australian farmers at 52 years old – 12 years older than the
national average for other occupations. The ABS found the picutre even
more alarming with nearly a quarter of all farmers aged 65 years and over.
These are just some of the issues with aging populations. The importance of
the public sector lies goes beyond aging populations.
The public sector has always been large. In Britain, for example, the public
sector accounts for 20% of the GDP and nearly 40% when welfare
payments are included. [GDP or gross domestic product is the statistician‘s
indicator of the output of the economy].
The numbers are similar in Australia, even before the recession of the late
2000‘s. Including health, education, etc., the proportion of GDP taken up
by government expenditure quickly surges to about 20%. Add welfare
payments and we reach the British figures of 40% of all expenditure.
This proportion of our economy accounted by the public sector was before
the latest ―recession‖ in 2007-8 when private investment collapsed and
public sector investment stepped in to stimulate the economy. In Australia,
public sector investment rose by a staggering 40% per annum during the
recession.
9
Since the end of the mineral boom, most investment growth has been due to
the public sector, not the private sector.
23.1% 2007-08
25.1%
2008-09
26.0% 2009-10
24.5% 2010-11
24.9% 2011-12
24.1% 2012-13
25.6% 2013-14
25.6% 2014-15
10
Note that these figures on the relative size of the public sector in our
economy are based on the economists‘ definition of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP). This is a very crude measurement that discounts the value
of the public sector.
Even Federal ministers fall into this trap of using GDP. In May 2010,
Senator Kim Carr, then Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and
Research, released a statement saying in part:
11
―Economists and statisticians have long known that GDP is not and was
never intended to be a measure of wellbeing or progress. While we have
long known its limitations, we as a discipline, have not done enough to
discourage its use in inappropriate places,‖ Dr Gruen admitted.
―It also does not factor in many goods and services produced by the public
sector, thus in effect favouring the private sector and privatisation.‖
―It doesn‘t appropriately measure the goods and services produced by the
public sector, and it can also sometimes give a misleading picture of how
well the economy is performing.‖
GDP simply neglects much of the benefits and activities provided by the
public sector.
We can safely say that the public sector is large in terms of output in the
economy, even larger when we consider its role in transfer payments
(pensions and the like) and dominant in regulation. As well, economic
measurements, severely understate the importance of the public sector.
It is vital then for the well being of Australia that the public sector should
perform well: both effectively and efficiently.
Coinciding with the growing significance of the public sector and its
activities, public sector management has been evolving with the
development of several conceptual models.
These models and theories have been developing since the 1950‘s but have
expanded rapidly in recent years with wider acceptance.
12
Prior to these conceptual models of public service management, most
strategic analysis in the public sector was merely descriptive: ―have a go
and muddle through‖ or an extension of strategy development for business.
Yet business strategy is inadequate for public sector requirements.
13
The theory challenges the presumption that majority decisions are
inherently fair. It shows why some special interest projects (pork barreling)
logically proceed despite not being the desire of the majority.
The theory also discusses why many government agencies are “captured”
by special interest groups because they do not have a profit goal to guide or
limit their behaviour (George Stigler, another Nobel Prize winner). Instead,
a mission or goal is used as the guide. But those who will benefit from the
agency may lobby regarding the mission‘s definition and then lobby for
resources to be diverted to the agency for their benefit.
This approach has been used in the United States of America which has the
benefit of a sufficiently large economy and society to afford multiple
suppliers and competition. Such a luxury is not afforded to most economies
and so instead we need to be more diligent in ensuring efficiency and
fairness from monopoly suppliers.
Not surprisingly, from the above examples, public choice theory is often
viewed as conservative or small government in philosophy rather than
traditional Keynesian interventionist economics. This is not necessarily so
and the two philosophies can be compatible.
During the 1940‘s and 1950‘s, Von Neumann was trying to understand how
the world of people really worked. He was joined by a neo classical
economist, Oskar Morgenstern. Together they founded the first principles
of game theory and subsequently received the Nobel Prize. Initially the
games were zero sum or competitive games but they were later extended to
co-operative behaviour or win/win scenarios through the work of John
Nash.
15
Karl Weick has written much about making sense in organisations and the
inability to make decisions. Not making or deferring a decision is actually a
decision: usually a sub-optimal one!
The value of the models is that they begin a theoretic underpinning for the
need and use of strategic analysis and planning in the public sector. We
begin to become more scientific and systematic in determining what the
public sector should be doing.
16
Other demands such as global warming, depletion of natural resources and
recognition that Australia, like most of the world, has been depleting its
environment in an unsustainable manner, all add to growing requirements
for public sector provision of goods and services.
At the same time, there is a lack of political will (or public acceptance) to
raise taxes – at least from influential interest groups. We are seeing moves
to reduce company tax with little justification than dogmatic belief.
It is pointless to be very efficient if you are not doing what you should:
achieving the desired outcomes. You could flick through this book in a
matter of minutes and say you have looked at the book. But if you learned
nothing, thought about nothing and changed nothing, then your efficient
skim reading would not be particularly effective. [Comedian Woody Allen
joked he speed read Tolstoy‘s War and Peace. Apparently it was about
Russia].
Focus on effectiveness requires that the organisation has very clear goals
for what it wants to achieve. It also requires the goals to be expressed in
measurable terms. The cerebral challenge for public sector managers is
that the measurable terms are unlikely to be dollars profit. Time and effort
needs to be spent up front determining good and appropriate measurements.
Strategy is first and foremost about being effective, about achieving your
goals – and then secondly about doing so with the least costs. Effectiveness
requires strategic focus and planning.
We need to become the best shots to get ―the most bang for our buck.‖
As Brian Eastoe (long time public sector manager, then private sector
executive then consultant to the public sector) has commented: ―the biggest
issue in public sector management has been too much concentration on
process and too little on outcomes.‖
Mission and strategy are focused firstly on being effective. They are critical
to achieving the right use of resources to the benefit of stakeholders. First
and foremost, our public sector managers and executives need to be
effective. Then we can worry about being efficient. That is the focus of this
book.
The Labor Party experiments with the ―Third Way‖ of market based
socialism, emulated by Tony Blair and Bill Clinton have largely played out.
It has also been called the New Public Management model. As Geoff
Gallop [former Labor premier of Western Australia] says, departments
became agencies and authorities were corporatised and often privatised.
The conservative parties pushed this trend even further. But there are signs
the push is faltering. The new direction is unclear.
19
In any case, we are seeing two major developments in public sector
management:
20
also for new powers and interventions to deal with complex problems
associated with poverty and social exclusion, to tackle the new policy
agendas in health, education, community safety and welfare, and to
respond to the threats posed by terrorism and global warming.
Briggs continued:
―As it has evolved, program management has taken on a ‗change‘
focus. The term itself implies, in my view, a responsiveness to the
environment (political, social, cultural, strategic) that drives change;
but also changes to structures and processes, to a more strategic focus
on expected outcomes and, if necessary, to culture—with a clear view to
achieving the Government‘s policy objective.‖
Briggs echoes Gallop‘s view that senior public servants now need new and
diverse skills to handle the complexities of the new world.
21
1.7 Reactionary Alternatives
Having touted the arguments for a stronger and more effective public
sector, there is no guarantee that it will happen.
So much for the argument that the private sector always operates better
than the public sector.
But the view that the private sector is the doyen of efficiency is entrenched.
In September 2016, the Federal Coalition Government‘s favourite
consultant, Ernst & Young, released a discussion paper acknowledging the
demands being placed upon the public sector. The ―solution‖ by Ernst &
Young was to basically hand over the public service tasks to the private
sector wherever feasible.
22
The Public Service would be effectively reduced to a contract oversight
role. "Scaling back the public service to doing what is core and
capitalising on the strengths of private and non-government
organisations is required to deliver services better and more
cheaply," the report said.
The presumption was that of course the private sector could deliver better
than the public sector. The paper presents an ideology not an argument.
Unsurprisingly, Ernst & Young was the most generous recipient of
consulting Government contracts between the Coalition election win in
2013 and the end of 2015. They received over $67 million which was 30%
higher than second place getter Pricewaterhouse Coopers. [Fairfax Media]
It would seem that the Public Sector as a whole needs a grand strategy to
defend itself against ideological attack.
23
Key Points of This Chapter
4. The mantra then has been to do more with less. Some gains
can be made through efficiencies. Such gains are generally
marginal. The big gains come from being more strategic and
effective.
24
2. Use of Strategic Models
There can be so much data and detail that you soon lose sight of the forest
for all the trees. That is where models and tools come in. They help to
organise our thoughts and analysis.
The strategic manager uses models and tools to help sift through and
analyse the vast array of data, to analyse what it means and to devise
tailored solutions or strategies.
25
Several leading consultancies have been built on the development and
promotion of a model. There are many models and consultancies. There are
many problems and needs. So what models and tools to use, and when?
With so many models and tools, which ones are useful in which situation?
Which models have substance and which models are fads, furphies or
facile?
Public sector managers need the ability to evaluate models and theories and
separate the wheat from the chaff; or the neat from the naff. Be wary of the
next consultancy promoting a patented procedure guaranteed to solve your
problems.
The more tools in which you are competent, the more applicable and rich
will be your analysis and strategic decisions.
The issues facing the public sector today are more varied than just a nail
waiting to be hammered. Strategic analysis is highly complex due to:
26
3. The multi disciplinary skills and knowledge required to
understand and assess these variables. The required skills
include psychology, finance, accounting, organisational
design, operations, marketing, legal, technology and more.
While not needing to be an expert, the strategic analyst needs
enough understanding of all disciplines to take them into
appropriate consideration.
As Sun Tzu wrote: Do not repeat the tactics that won you a victory, but
vary them according to the circumstances.
He who can modify his tactics in relation to his opponent and thereby
succeed in winning, may be called a heaven-born captain.
The process is not purely linear, even though it is usually taught in that
manner. We do not simply progress from
Step 1: analysis of the environment; to
Step 2: assessment of internal capabilities; to
Step 3: formulation of strategic choices; to
Step 4: evaluation of strategies based on risk, return and fit.
Instead, the process is iterative with feedback loops. These steps must be
seen in the context of missions and goals as guiding principles. For
example, we may arrive at Step 3 to formulate strategies and find that there
is not a viable strategy to achieve our mission given our current
capabilities. So either loop back to adjust the mission to be more realistic or
else build more appropriate capabilities.
27
Further complexity is due to our operating with incomplete data or
uncertainty and with some ignorance.
Finally, the analyst needs to take a holistic approach. Each factor cannot
be appreciated in isolation but in its context of how it interacts with all the
other factors. We work in an interactive system: whether it is a
socioeconomic system; political system; business system; ecosystem; or
some other system. Indeed, the world now needs to be considered in terms
of how each of these systems interacts with each other system in a total
integrated system.
Models and frameworks are tools to simplify the analysis as well as acting
as checklists to ensure the important points and issues are not missed. This
is the benefit of the tools.
Gain fluency in useful models and know when to apply them. You can then
become Sun Tzu‘s ―heaven-born leader‖.
We want to lead and not blindly follow each other like the mythical
lemming suicide run depicted on the next page.
28
It is a Disney myth that lemmings commit mass suicide jumping off a cliff. But we do see managers blindly follow
myths or fads. Some might do it with more style, but the end result remains the same. Be a leader not a follower.
29
Key Points
5. Tools and models help simplify the vast array of data and
help us to make sense of it.
30
3. Overview of Strategy Development
As seen in the previous chapter, strategic analysis and decision making are
complex functions for the senior manager. It is not a simple, step-by-step
process to follow.
Lest we become lost in the detail too quickly, an overview of the basic
process is shown below. This is done to gain a quick overall appreciation of
the full process. In the next chapters, we will return to each component in
more detail.
The goals articulate the mission in more stringent terms. Later, when we
move to strategic planning and implementation, we will further detail the
goals with measurable objectives.
The mission and goals are needed for guidance and focus and as a
benchmark to determine success. We ―end‖ with the implementation of the
strategy – strategy is wasted unless implemented.
31
It is desirable to have some mission or purpose as a guiding principle to
action.
This mission usually needs to be detailed into constituent goals and then
measurable objectives. For example, companies have traditionally had
shareholder value as a guiding mission (at least if agency theory applies).
This shareholder value mission has often been detailed into set targets for
return on equity, growth targets for earnings per share and so on.
For a public sector agency, the mission has far more importance and power
than in the private sector. Here we do not have an implied mission of
shareholder value.
So the mission not only guides the agency but leads to the measurements of
determining achievement.
32
We begin by understanding what is happening in the environment in which
we currently operate, and more importantly, to forecast what the
environment will be like in the future.
From the synthesis of the environment and where it is going and given our
capabilities, what are the strategies we could pursue to achieve our
mission? Generally, the sooner we undertake the analysis and act, the more
strategic choices that are open to us. As we delay, degrees of freedom tend
to narrow.
From our strategic choices, which ones best fit our capability, have the
most chance to succeed and cost the least in terms of resources (i.e.
efficient) and have the more manageable risks? If a suitable strategy is not
available, do we need to spend more resources on building capabilities?
33
Perhaps our mission is unattainable and needs to be revised (the iterative
process described earlier).
Monitor / Review
Figure 3.1 Context for Analysis and Strategy Formulation
34
Our mission leads to the goals and objectives. The purpose of the strategies,
plans and actions is to give us a more reasoned chance to achieve our
mission and its goals and objectives.
But a warning!
Our models and frameworks are not reality. We need to keep in mind the
limitations of our models and constructs.
Karl Weick, a professor at the University of Michigan, has been writing for
years about how organisations try to make sense of their surroundings and
how they make decisions.
He shows how our models and constructs colour our view of reality.
―Managers construct, rearrange, single out, and demolish many
―objective‖ features of their surroundings. When people act, they
unrandomize variables, insert vestiges of orderliness, and literally create
their own constraints.‖ [Social Psychology of Organizing, p.243].
35
Theodore Levitt as far back as 1960 [Harvard Business Review Classic]
warned of the power of our definitions in a paper titled Marketing Myopia.
The US Railroad companies defined their industry as the railroad business
and continued to act accordingly until they were put out of business by the
trucking companies – they were really in the transport industry!
Weick argues that ignorance is not the problem. Instead of gathering more
data, you should refer back to principles (mission), values and preferences
to help make a choice. Weick says we need to learn to live with ambiguity
36
and uncertainty in trying to make sense of our
environment – he calls it equivoque.
Defending the status quo is ―old‖ public service thinking. Even if past
practices or decisions were correct, the rapid changes in the world today are
unlikely to leave such practices or decisions as optimal in the present and
even less so in the future.
Colin Powell, former chief of staff for the U.S. Army and former Secretary
of State put it:
Part I: ―Use the formula P=40 to 70, in which P stands for the
probability of success and the numbers indicate the percentage of
information acquired.‖
Part II: ―Once the information is in the 40 to 70 range, go with your
gut.‖
37
However, in the same ―Leadership Primer‖ Powell goes on to state:
―Never neglect details. When everyone‘s mind is dulled or
distracted the leader must be doubly vigilant.‖
―Strategy equals execution. All the great ideas and visions in the
world are worthless if they can‘t be implemented rapidly and
efficiently. Good leaders delegate and empower others liberally, but
they pay attention to details, every day.‖
Missions or goals help set our area of focus. They are the criteria against
which we test our actions. Yes, we may need to raise our heads sometimes
to avoid excessive myopia, but we still need to act within our sphere.
These are the questions we explore and show how to answer in the
following chapters.
38
We use whichever models or frameworks that help to guide us or act as
tools in the particular circumstances.
But the models and frameworks are only guides or tools and we need to
bring our own intellect and analysis to the specific issue. They are tools in
our hands and not prescriptive masters.
Then, we design our unique strategy and plans to meet our unique
circumstances and needs.
39
Key Points
40
4. Big Picture of the Strategic Processes
First, you need to have a picture of the entire process - a holistic view.
While we may learn strategy in steps, this is not how it actually operates. It
is a complete interactive system with feedback loops and iteration. So
before we drop into details of the processes, here we provide a quick
overview or summary of the entire approach.
Strategy lies across a spectrum with the mission at the beginning and plans
and actions at the end. Strategy fills the analysis and decisions in-between.
We have various tools or models to aid us in answering the questions.
The points along the spectrum are not discrete. There is overlap and some
blurring of roles. As well, it is not unidirectional: there is feedback at times.
Strategic Scope
The interrelationships of the process are more complex than shown by the
strategic scope spectrum above.
The first section on the Mission and its acceptance by stakeholders is far
more important and detailed in public sector strategy than it is in private
sector strategy. After that, the processes are very similar between the public
and private sectors.
42
Figure 4.2 Strategic Process Overview
Even though highly summarised, the process map above is still ―busy‖. So
we will work through it in steps or stages in the following chapters.
The methodology is also partly heuristic with the use of past examples and
experience to discover new insights and new answers. This makes strategy
both challenging and interesting.
43
Key Points
44
5. Step 1: Mission and Goals
In the public sector, considerable thought and time are spent articulating a
powerful mission statement. It can and should be more than ―pretty‖ words.
Not only does the Mission define the organisation‘s raison d‘etre, it also
acts as an important guide and focus to activities. Finally, it will be a
starting point to set the benchmarks to evaluate performance – especially
when there are no comparative or competitive yardsticks.
Multiple stakeholders.
46
segment a particular ―package‖ of outcomes that generally satisfies the
wants of that group or segment.
Such groupings are not perfect and individuals in each segment may feel
less than perfectly satisfied, but you at least manage general satisfaction
and can move on.
Environmentalists and businesses that are able to sell carbon credits may
both want a carbon tax, although for very different reasons. At least for the
purpose of supporting a carbon tax, these groups could be aligned.
47
Identify and Satisfy the Critical Stakeholder(s)
Typically there is a critical or prime stakeholder who must be satisfied to
minimum requirements. Whether it is the relevant Minister or the client or a
lobby group, this stakeholder and their needs must be identified and
satisfied even if not totally fulfilled.
Prime
Stakeholders
M
Stakeholders
i
Can we simplify
s Need to canvass
s - stakeholders,
stakeholders?
i - clients / users
e.g. align, group,
- with consideration
segment o
of the environment
{ Stakeholders
Stakeholders
Stakeholders
n
Users/ Manage
Clients expectations
48
Three-dimensional grouping of power, interest and attitude
(Murray-Webster and Simon 2005)
A = High Power & Low Interest B = High Power & High Interest
C = Low Power & Low Interest D = Low Power & High Interest
It is curious that public sector organisations are now doing more surveys
than ever, just as private enterprise is dropping them. Survey consultancies
are grateful for government departments, hospitals, universities, transport
agencies and the like to sustain their businesses.
For example, surveys of people in shopping centres have been found not to
include many real shoppers. Those willing to complete a survey are more
likely bored mall browsers filling in time. The real shoppers brush past the
survey takers to get on with their shopping. Researchers have found better
quality data by just observing what the real shoppers do.
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Likewise, there are biases with focus groups, especially when they are paid.
We have ―professional‖ focus group attendees who are likely to provide the
response they think the interviewers want in order to be invited to more
focus groups.
When the television ratings moved from a diary filled in by the viewer to
―black boxes‖ recording which channels were actually tuned in and when,
the recorded audience share for more cultured ABC programs fell and the
ratings for more prurient programs on Channel 10 rose. The diary entries
had been ―coloured‖ to present a more cultured profile of the viewer.
Observing how clients and other stakeholders react to our programs and
services can be more useful (and less costly) than extensive surveys. The
observations can be supplemented with some interviews to check on the
validity of your observations and to gain some qualitative data.
Twenty years later, Hawke admitted the comment was one of his greatest
regrets. ―It was a silly shorthand thing‖ he said [The Age, June 16 2007].
The Government did not have the resources, powers, strategies, plans or
other capabilities to deliver on this mission and certainly not within 3 years.
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Marketing and Managing Expectations
Marketing is far more than advertising or promoting what the organisation
does. Marketing should also seek to change the views or preferences of the
stakeholders.
Yes, we can have a policeman on every street corner but your taxes will
skyrocket or you will need to have fewer hospitals, schools and so on. As
well, it will not stop cyber crime and fraud.
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Tightly Define the Users / Clients
Too many clients or too broad a definition of the clients of the organisation
can create an impossible task where nothing can be delivered to a high
standard and no-one is adequately satisfied. Segmenting and defining
clients is a useful tool for reducing complexity in the services to be
provided.
The organisation was also operating in just New South Wales due to the
history of its origin.
The charity has achieved impressive results from this focus. They also
carefully measure and market the results.
Now, The Smith Family no longer saw its role as providing general relief,
food packages or clothing to the poor – there were many other
organisations better placed to do that. Those people seeking such services
were no longer clients of The Smith Family.
Interestingly, the mission was for young Australians, not just those in New
South Wales. So if the mission had power, it also meant that The Smith
Family should expand to be a truly national charity, which it did.
On the other side of the ledger, such a clear focus on education for children
across the nation, gave the charity a focussed appeal to national sponsors
interested in this focus.
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5.3 Articulating and Marketing the Mission
The mission statement should be real and it should have power. It should be
a force that defines what the organisation does, and just as importantly,
what the organisation does not do.
Maritime Operations of the Navy would not develop long range capability
to operate in the Red Sea. The Department of Corrective Services would
not only seek a safe environment for inmates and staff but also would
introduce case management and rehabilitation programs, rather than just
securing the inmates humanely.
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Case Example: Using and Marketing the
Mission: NSW Fire & Rescue
In January 2011, NSWFB changed its name to NSW Fire & Rescue. This
is NOT just a cosmetic change. It is very clever use of the mission by Greg
Mullins for marketing the role of the organisation to all of its stakeholders
(Government, community, and staff) and to other agencies.
The stated purpose fits within (congruent with) the State Plan:
Our purpose is to enhance community safety, quality of life and
confidence by minimising the impact of hazards and emergency
incidents on the people, environment and economy of NSW.
The change of name and modification of purpose has been used very
cleverly to position the organisation. It has been carefully and deliberately
done.
5.4 Vision
Some organisations go one level higher than the mission statement and
have a vision. This is some grand long term view of the world and the place
of the organisation in it. It is not essential and is often at the warm and
fuzzy end of the scale.
By comparison, the Mission and Vision of the then Roads and Traffic
Authority (RTA) of NSW was more difficult to find (you needed to hunt in
the Corporate Plan). As well it was very vague:
Our vision
A sustainable, safe and efficient road transport system.
Our mission
Delivery of the best road transport outcomes balancing the needs of
public transport passengers, cyclists, pedestrians, motorists and
commercial operators.
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The responsibilities were listed as:
Managing the road network to achieve consistent travel times.
Providing road capacity and maintenance solutions.
Testing and licensing drivers and registering and inspecting
vehicles.
Improving road safety.
Commuters would perhaps have preferred improved travel times rather than
the consistently slow travel times.
Also, it seems that there was little to stop the RTA from taking huge up-
front fees from road infrastructure providers and then harming motorists by
reducing their ability to use the public roads, and instead forcing them into
the private operators‘ facilities! [See the Cross City Tunnel example later].
Both steps are necessary in order to move from the broad and aspirational
mission to outcomes that can be measured and thus need plans and action to
achieve.
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Goal(s) There must be some purpose for the
activity to exist.
Every level of the organisation will have its own goals and objectives and
plans.
These goals, objectives and plans may not be specified but they will exist.
It is better to have them visible and agreed than implied!
In setting the goals and objectives for the various levels, the key rule is that
they must be consistent or congruent with the goals and objectives of the
level above. In this way, the overall goals of the organisation will be
achieved. Actions at lower levels of the organisation hierarchy are tested to
ensure they are helping to deliver the higher order goals further up in the
hierarchy.
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Consequently, it is necessary to first work out the goals and objectives
at the very top and then cascade down the hierarchy.
Often senior managers complain about the lack of direction and focus from
their subordinate managers and departments. In nearly every case, the
problem is that the senior managers have yet to clearly articulate their goals
and give direction. Managers at the lower levels of the organisational
hierarchy are largely left to second guess and assume about the goals of
their senior managers.
Senior managers need to clearly state the goals and objectives of their level;
communicate and market these goals; check and test that they are
understood; and then follow up to see that actions are occurring to deliver
the goals and objectives.
Strategy Hierarchies
Strategy can be played out on several levels, depending on the where in the
organisation we are operating. As well, strategy is dependent on the time
frame.
At the other end of the time scale, in the short term, we are generally left
with micro strategies or tactics that are steps or ―game plays‖ towards
achieving one of the component strategies. Such micro strategies or tactics
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may frequently be reactions or counters to changing circumstances. They
will have short lives and change often.
Too much change confuses our constituents (staff, clients and other
stakeholders) and does not allow enough time for the strategy to take effect.
We are on a long journey with the grand strategy.
LEVELS OF STRATEGY
Vision /
Strategic
Intent
Grand Strategy
for Multi Task
Organisation
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Goals are not a wish list. They should be the few ultimate aims of the
organisation or activity. Too many goals will cause effort to be diffused,
increase confusion and perhaps create incompatible goals.
Further down the hierarchy, other functions will set their goals. For
example, the time relief for stressed families function may have goals of:
These goals are consistent with the overall goal of providing relief to
families in distress.
5.8 Objectives
Goals are the broad, long term aims of the organisation or function. But
goals are usually so broad that they lack quantification and measurement.
All of these objectives can be measured. Note that they all have a time
frame. So at the call of time, we can definitively state whether or not the
objective has been achieved.
The objectives are tighter than saying we will consider having a forum to
discuss a carbon tax sometime after the life of the current parliament.
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It can be difficult to quantify objectives but it is very desirable. ―If it cannot
be expressed in figures it is opinion, not fact‖ (Robert Heinlein).
The clearer the objective, the less doubt there is in anyone‘s mind about
what is to be achieved. When it is time for review, there should be no
debate whether the objective has been achieved or not.
Note that in the complex world of the public sector, we may not be able to
directly measure objectives. It is simpler in the business sector where we
aim to have 25% market share or a return on investment of 12% or launch 3
new products in the year.
Often in the public sector *and not-for-profit sector) we need to fall back
on indicators of success rather than direct and absolute measures.
As another example, most Police Services have missions along the line of
―safer communities‖.
But what is ―safer‖? How do you measure it? Is it less crime being reported
or more crime being solved or just people feeling less threatened?
With such a broad and ill defined goal, we need to suffice with indicators
rather than direct objectives. If we achieve the indicator, it is likely that we
are moving towards achieving our goals. Indicators of success in a
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campaign against amphetamines may be fewer admissions to casualty
departments of hospitals or less profitable bikie gangs.
Thirdly, the public sector often provides complex services that are difficult
to measure or value. As a result, there is a tendency to instead measure
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inputs: how much resources were spent on the activity. This is at best, an
efficiency measure, not an effectiveness measure.
Fourthly, rewards and penalties in the public sector often have little
correlation to performance. So again, the importance of outcomes is
reduced.
However, the tide is turning. The growing demands placed upon public
sector organisations and the limited resources available plus the
professionalism of public sector management are pushing for greater
emphasis on outcomes.
―Funding decisions are made having regard not only to costs but also the
appropriateness, efficiency and effectiveness. By linking budget allocations
to performance, the use of public resources is made more transparent.‖
~ NSW Treasury, Financial Management Framework
One feature of this change is that some public sector agencies must now
complete a Results and Services Plan (RSP). This sets out what the agency
intends to achieve with the resources allocated to it. To date, Results and
Services Plans have been inconsistently applied in Government
departments and agencies.
An RSP is prepared under ―results logic‖. This links what an agency does
(services) to its impact on the community (results).
Much of this premise has been developed by Mark Friedman in the USA,
and it is now commonly referred to as the Friedman Model.
Strategies are put in place to achieve the outcomes. Strategies in the model
are defined as ―coherent collections of actions that have a reasoned chance
of improving results.‖ [While this is a usable definition of a strategy, it does
not really help us devise the strategies].
While considerable time and skill are required to initially set these goals
and objectives, they actually save the manager considerable time and pain
and make for a better running department or program.
Once the objectives are set and accepted, then we can manage by
objectives. The great management guru, Peter Drucker coined the term
Management by Objectives or MBO.
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The investment in time and quality thinking in setting the objectives
initially is repaid manyfold in terms of releasing time for senior managers
to oversee and lead.
The senior manager does not, and should not, micro manage members of
staff tasked with achieving various objectives. The senior manager may
assist and check but the staff members can now be given scope to do the
tasks to achieve the goals. Periodically, the senior manager will check
progress on achieving the goals: monitoring.
On the other hand, our business maxim of ―what gets measured, gets done‖
is a two-edged sword. So care must be taken that everything that is
essential to be done, is expressed as an objective and is measured. What is
insignificant should probably be left aside.
The Reserve Bank of Australia is a very good example of smart use of the
mission. It is possibly the most successful public sector organisation in
Australia!
The Reserve Bank Act 1959 split the central bank roles to the newly
created Reserve Bank of Australia while the Commonwealth Bank focused
on its commercial banking operations. This was deemed prudent and fair,
given the Commonwealth Bank‘s competition with private sector banks.
Section 10(2) of the Act, which is often referred to as the Bank‘s ‗charter‘,
says:
‗It is the duty of the Reserve Bank Board, within the limits of its powers, to
ensure that the monetary and banking policy of the Bank is directed to the
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greatest advantage of the people of Australia and that the powers of the
Bank ... are exercised in such a manner as, in the opinion of the Reserve
Bank Board, will best contribute to:
(a) the stability of the currency of Australia;
(b) the maintenance of full employment in Australia; and
(c) the economic prosperity and welfare of the people of
Australia.‘
In effect, the Reserve Bank had to accept it could no longer achieve its
stated mission. Wisely, it changed its mission!
Gradually, the Reserve Bank laid the groundwork to sell the idea that it
should concentrate on stability of the currency (i.e. low inflation), first and
foremost. The Bank argued that low inflation would ultimately aid
employment and economic prosperity.
Shrewdly, the Reserve Bank did not set an inflation target that was too
onerous, especially regarding the time frame. In 1993, the objective of price
stability was outlined publicly by the then Governor, Mr Bernie Fraser, as a
rate of inflation which was held to an average of 2-3 per cent over a period
of years.
Just as importantly though, it was emphasised that this added mandate did
not mean an obligation to bail out a failing bank.
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Such an agreement demonstrates clever use of the mission as to what the
Reserve Bank will do and also what it will not do.
The Reserve Bank has actively restated its mission to be something it can
realistically achieve given the environment in which it operates. Before
―adjusting‖ its mission, the Reserve Bank spent considerable time
canvassing stakeholders and marketing its preferred mission while
managing expectations.
4. Cultivate allies.
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Key Points
71
9. Mission statements are generally brief and inspiring. They
therefore lack detail. The detail is added by setting goals that
will lead to achieving the mission.
12. Time moves on. It may be that the mission loses relevance or
can no longer be achieved in the changed environment. It
would be wise then to change the mission. See the Reserve
Bank example.
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6. Step 2: Environmental Analysis
What is happening and where is it going?
Now that the Mission and its subset of goals and measurable objectives
have been determined, we proceed to analyse the environment in which we
operate now and in the future.
For example, the field in which we are we operating could be defined by:
service or product
client type
geographic location
time frame
service delivery point
private or public benefit
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This definition immediately narrows the scope of our data search to
manageable proportions. We are not going to look at cities or large country
towns. We are not going to look at adult or even youth issues and we are
focusing on nutrition rather than all health, drug and other social issues.
Sociologists may criticise us that we are ignoring the wider social problems
and that we cannot look at such a narrow slice of child health in isolation
from issues surrounding poor housing, inadequate access to health
facilities, education and so on. Such criticisms are true and valid. However,
if we broaden our scope to cover all these issues, we will still be working
on the analysis long after our current clients of 7 years of age are applying
for the age pension.
When we say we will focus narrowly, it does not mean, that we will totally
exclude the wider environment from our analysis. However, we will treat
the environment beyond our focus in less depth and only raise its
importance if some aspects will impinge on our ability to operate in our
area of focus.
Business analysis does much the same. It normally focuses most attention
on the internal rivalry within the defined market and customers. It is
acknowledged though, that there are alternatives for customers, beyond the
immediate focus of the defined market. These are labelled substitutes and
the depth of their analysis depends on how closely they are considered as
alternatives by our customers.
Instead, we need to direct the hunt for information that is relevant and
key.
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Megatrends Checklists
Life Cycles e.g. PESTLE:
Trends: Political
- large scale Economic
- local Social
Technological
Legal
M
Environment
i
s Gather data
s
i
o
n Poll
Survey
Study
Users/ Question
Clients Theorise
Dictate
Figure 6.1 Tools for Gathering Data
So from the start, the analyst is filtering the input of data from the
environment.
While filtering is important, it runs the risk that important data is ignored or
depreciated. This ―myopia‖ can be partly controlled by the use of more than
one analyst in a team approach – or at least a review body – and the use of
checklists built from past experience.
Even market research companies are questioning the results from surveys.
Apart from the usual concerns about sample size and representation,
psychological evidence warns of halo effects where the survey respondents
provide answers that either put the respondents in a better light (in their
view) or are the responses that the interviewee thinks that the interviewer
wants to hear. Remember the diary surveys and the ratings biases between
Channels 2 and 10.
A consequence has been to use focus groups where the aim is more on
qualitative information rather than quantitative responses. ―Why do you
like this product?‖ How would the service be improved if we changed the
service points‖? Even then, we may attract ―professional‖ focus group
attendees who are keen to give the answers that researchers like in order to
be included on future focus groups.
So where else can the researcher turn? Fortunately, there are several
avenues.
Find the expert. Almost all environments, industries and fields of study
have one or more recognised experts. Interviews with these people bring
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not only data but analysis built up over many years. Care needs to be taken
against bias or inaccuracy by the expert. Consequently, it should only be
one data gathering technique and the data should be checked against other
sources.
Check behaviour. Not just observation as above but analyse the history of
actual behaviour. If sales or use of a service are declining over time or in a
particular region, than this is valid data. If our staff members are resigning
at a rapid rate or if clients no longer attend a certain program, then we are
being given important signs that all is not well. You can obtain data on
movements, purchases, enquiries, enrolments and so on.
The military forces have been told for years they have a problem with
personnel retention. Yet only recently have they started to survey why staff
members are leaving in droves and do exit interviews. Surprisingly, the
popular view that it is about pay and conditions compared to what could be
earned in a buoyant private economy, does not stand out. This has been an
excuse used by senior officers.
What you and your staff already know. The field of competitive
intelligence is founded on gaining information that allows analysis leading
to insight. Interestingly, it downplays the usefulness of the internet (too
much disinformation) and market surveys. Instead, most of the information
required for analysis probably lies already within the organisation. It is in
the heads of the staff members who have operated in the environment for
years.
However, social issues and goals are broader than business issues and
goals. Thus, social checklists are less prescriptive of what the factor might
mean in the overall analysis. Consequently, the analyst needs to conduct
further steps to determine what the information from the checklist means
and what are the consequences?
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added) or even STEEPLED (with demographics added as a separate
heading.
.
Twenty years ago, the mnemonic was a simple PEST. Life was simpler
then.
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Social: Population demographics (who, where, how many,
how old)
Cultural beliefs and attitudes
Income levels and distribution
Labour mobility
Occupations
Social classes and mobility
Education levels and availability
Lifestyle movements
Health levels and conditions
Living conditions
Leisure and lifestyle activities
Religions
Outlooks, confidence levels
Attitudes
Welfare levels
Consumer behaviours
Just as in trying to locate your position using a map and compass, you will
take several bearings and try to locate your position within a reasonably
small area (global positioning technology notwithstanding). The minimum
number of bearings required to obtain an area is three. Hence the term:
triangulation. You should be located somewhere within this triangular area.
More bearings may reduce the area of uncertainty but the effort needs to be
balanced by the likelihood and benefits of a more defined area.
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By using several techniques to scan the environment, you may not be
certain of your exact position, but you should have narrowed it down to a
reasonable area of knowledge or limited uncertainty. If further effort to
more accurately pinpoint the position would not change the decisions you
would already make, then you have wasted time and resources on
unnecessary accuracy.
Irrelevant – let it go
Having spent so much effort collecting data, we often find it difficult to let
some go. But most of your data is dross or background ―noise‖. Let it go so
you can focus on the few important pieces of information. You will discard
or downplay most of the data.
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Sift: Analyse and Synthesise:
- key
- interrelations
- important - cause and effect
- minor - correlations
- irrelevant - triggers, blocks
M
i
s Analyse data
s
i Synthesise data
o
n
Demand
- needs, wants
- quality, quantity
Users/ - offering
Clients - payment?
Figure 6.3 Filtering and Synthesising Data
Trigger and Blocks are interesting and they remind the analyst that life is
not linear. Nothing may happen until a trigger is set off or a threshold
reached. Then events will change rapidly. We can see this in stock markets
and housing markets and they occur in social events as well. See the
example later on analysis of youth gangs for triggers.
More recently, books have been written about a new concept of the tipping
point. This is actually just our triggers and blocks being given a fancy new
name to promote another consulting fad.
Cause and Effect has always been a major issue for social and economic
theorists and doctors. When we observe events, which was the cause and
which was the effect? Treating the effect is only secondary. The root issue
has not been dealt with and is likely to soon manifest itself in some other
effect. If we can identify and treat the cause, our strategy is likely to be
more successful long term.
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6.8 Major Drivers from Hypothesis
It helps to have some theory or hypothesis on what is important. This will
direct the initial focus of study. The danger is that we bring our
preconceived views and biases to the analysis and that we risk ignoring
important facts.
For example, the unravelling of the double helix structure of the DNA
molecule was hindered for years by the view (including Linus Pauling, the
pre-eminent chemist) that the helix was a three strand structure. Watson
and Crick only moved to the double helix structure after exhausting
attempts to make the three strand structure work. More critically, they were
given access by Maurice Wilkins to the X ray photo and research work of
Rosalind Franklin which physically showed the helix with a double strand
structure.
Watson, Crick and Wilkins received the Nobel Prize. Franklin died young
from cancer before any award and the Nobel Prize is not awarded
posthumously. The X ray radiation from her work almost certainly
contributed to her death.
Likewise, the discovery by two Perth doctors that most stomach ulcers are
caused by specific bacteria was delayed for years by the absolute belief in
medical circles that it was all about life style and generation of stomach
acid.
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The hypothesis on what is happening is also useful in determining what are
likely to be key drivers in the environment.
Focusing on key drivers follows the Pareto Rule or 80:20 rule. That is, 80%
of what is happening is caused by say 20% of the factors. In practice, it is
often more like a 90:10 rule.
The data gathering on key derivers will later lead to analysis of key success
factors later.
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6.9 Analysis
The modern trend is to spend at least as much time on analysis as on data
gathering. All the data gathering and sorting is useless unless it is analysed
for what it means.
What is Happening?
Where is it Going?
- issues
- trends
- priorities
- driving forces
- consequences
- which direction
M
i
s Analyse data
s
i
o
n
How Fast?
- velocity
- even or patchy
Users/ - linear, cyclical, exponential
Clients
Figure 6.5 Analysis of the Data
87
Remember that our analysis is looking for trends, if they truly exist,
correlations and causes and effects.
However, the report warned of two trigger events that should send alarms
that particular youth gangs were developing a long lived persona: seeking
to control drug distribution in schools and other defined areas (so that they
had an economic incentive and the resources to continue) and the
introduction of female members or associates so that the typical ―find a girl
and settle down‖ aging out process need not occur.
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6.10 Synthesis
Having separately studied the constituent parts of the environment and
determined their effects, we now reach the conceptually difficult process of
synthesis: putting it all together into a coherent understanding and forecast.
Factor One
Increase
Neutral
Decrease
Critical factors are shown in red and other important factors are shown in
blue. The size of each oval indicates the strength of the factor. Its position
on the grid shows where the factor is located today and the arrow indicates
where the factor is pushing towards (more or less of an impact).
Complexity of Delivery
Increase
retiree
morbidity locations
From the map, it could be expected that the already high demand and
complexity of providing aged health care are likely to become far more
acute over the next 10 to 20 years. This is the synthesis of our analysis.
―If you can‘t pay attention to, and assimilate technological information
beyond your borders, You‘re playing with one hand tied behind your
back.‖
Richard J Samuels, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
For example, with our aging population living outside capital cities, how
can technology provide new solutions? We have the Federal initiative for
personal control of medical records kept on the net. We have self diagnostic
tools on the web and on phone apps. We can do remote diagnostics of
digital X-rays and other tests. We have self administering allergy pens with
adrenaline. Can we extend this usage to other ailments or emergencies? The
possibilities go on and we need to consider such possibilities when
formulating strategies.
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Key Points
93
7. Step 3: Internal Analysis
What do we have going for us (our capabilities)?
Note that although the analysis is about our internal capabilities, the
assessment cannot be done in isolation from our mission or the external
environment. The assessment is based on what we need in order to respond
to the external environment so that we can achieve our mission.
Hence, this process is normally conducted after the setting of the mission
and after the first analysis of the external environment. However, there can
be feedback loops – even as far back as to revising the mission.
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As with the external or environmental analysis, there are a number of tools
or models to assist us in our assessment.
Culture:
Beliefs
Shared Goals
Style
Mechanistic
Systems / Structure: Culture Organic
Procedures
MIS Competencies:
Organisation structure: Skill sets
- centralised Capabilities of key staff
- decentralised Abilities of organisation
Points of operation Strategic strengths
Systems,
Competencies
Structure
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organisation needs a minimum level of each capability in order to be
adequately functional.
For example, having the best strategy or shared goals is fairly useless if the
organisation does not have the systems or structure to implement the
strategy! An example would be Sydney Ferries. The strategy seemed
appropriate but the skills, structure, systems, style and shared values were
abysmal and there were also concerns about staff and work practices and
skills. It is little wonder then that the organisation was incapable of
implementing its strategy successfully. It had to fix its many capability
problems before implementing its strategy.
Studies show that to succeed, organisations need more than just good
strategy or plentiful resources. They need a coherent patterning of a number
of factors which are the categories in the mnemonic 7-S.
The analyst determines if there are shortcomings in any of the factors that
would prohibit or inhibit successful application of the strategies.
McKinsey 7S Model
Structure Systems
Skills Style
The model reminds us that the capabilities are not discrete but are
interrelated.
For example, after the terrorist strike of September 11, 2001 in the USA,
airlines were grounded for several days and new security measures raised
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costs while travellers reduced flying to essential travel only. All US airlines
bar one laid off staff. The exception was Southwest Airlines. They took the
view that they would bleed as long as they could before they would lay off
staff. How could the airline ask for loyalty from its staff if it abandoned its
staff in times of trouble? Southwest had the best recovery of profitability
after September 11.
The framework or model has been used extensively and received attention
in management schools. Some critics point out that the model shows its
age (it was developed 30 years ago) and that the faster pace of today‘s
world means the model does not give sufficient emphasis to the need for
flexibility and pace of change. The criticisms are partially true but the
model is still useful with its limitations acknowledged.
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Capability Analysis
SWOT ANALYSIS
Strengths Weaknesses
Opportunities Threats
Strategy Formulation
Most organisations and most managers have carried out a SWOT analysis.
Most organisations and most managers have found the experience to be not
totally edifying or satisfying. Yet they return the next year to go through
the same fruitless exercise.
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Concentrate on the key or major strengths and weaknesses. List the
3 to 5 or so critical issues. There is a tendency to try and list as
many strengths or weaknesses as possible. Stay focused.
Even so, SWOT analysis is useful in the public sector too. The only major
difference is that the SWOT is not necessarily relative to competitors but
relative to the organisation‘s ability to achieve its mission or relative to
alternative suppliers of the service.
The SWOT is then conducted on the ability to achieve this given goal or
mission.
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For a public sector organisation, the missions are more complex but are
also more subject to debate and modification. So we look to see if the
organisation has the capabilities (essentially the strengths and weaknesses)
in order to achieve the mission. If not, we are faced with the choice of:
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Caution: Avoid the temptation to list all the strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities and threats that can be considered. This merely confuses the
analysis. Choose those factors that are significant, that are likely and/or will
have a major impact. These are the key factors.
The entire operations of the organisation are analysed for what value they
add and what they cost. One of the benefits of a value chain is that we can
see if the organisation is following a consistent strategy throughout its
operations e.g. low cost or quality.
HUMAN RESOURCES M
A
R
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT G
I
N
PROCUREMENT
M
A
INBOUND OUTBOUND MARKETING R
OPERATIONS SERVICE G
LOGISTICS LOGISTICS I
& SALES N
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Allied to the Value Chain is process mapping. This is a more detailed and
sophisticated diagnostic tool where the processes to deliver our services are
literally mapped out or put on a diagram. We see the tasks that must be
performed and in which order. We see the time taken and the resources
needed. From the map, we can visualise where there are inefficiencies or
duplications or bottlenecks.
These tools may show some easy wins: cutting processes and tasks that do
not add value to the organisation or lead to achieving the mission. Often,
there are legacy processes left over from some by-gone era. They are done
only because ―we have always done it that way‖.
The next fall back position is to cut some service or output entirely. There
are bound to be some low value outcomes that are no longer wanted or will
affect only minor stakeholders if cut. It is better to make savings by cutting
an entire offering than to do say a 10% funding cut across all programs and
activities. Such an across the board cut is a good way to ensure none of the
activities are performed well.
The model has most application where there is more than one service
provider i.e. a competitive situation. This does occur frequently in the
public sector where more than one department (or level of government) is
offering the same service or is servicing the same client or stakeholders
(think NSW Fire & Service versus Police Rescue). It also occurs where
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public sector organisations are competing against private sector suppliers
such as in education, some infrastructure services, transport, health, etc.
The map is usually just a two axis diagram (those into 3 D imaging can try
3 axes). Each axis has a significant competitive factor such as price, speed
of delivery, service, quality, guarantees, innovation, etc.
Your organisation and any similar providers are mapped on the diagram
depending on how they score on the factors chosen. Size of providers can
be indicated by the size of the circles drawn on the map to depict each firm.
It sounds simplistic but it often provides great insight into what should be
obvious but cannot be seen due to too much detail or verbage. In practice,
this technique is one of the most likely to produce an ―ah hah‖ moment for
managers who have been operating in their activity for years. Suddenly it
becomes clear why certain clients demand their services and why other
potential clients shun them,
You may need several maps by changing one or both factors on the axes.
The strongest position is in the top right hand corner, where you are
providing the most of the desired attributes to the client or have the greatest
level of benefits.
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Competitor Mapping
High
Low
Low High
Nonetheless, it is useful to raise your head up and consider the key success
factors. What are the few attributes or capabilities that we must have in
order to succeed (achieve our mission)?
Key success factors are the few critical factors required. We try to keep the
list to just two or three normally. They are sometimes referred to as Critical
Success Factors.
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Ensure you have these key success factors and you have covered most of
the capabilities you require to succeed. Ignore them and fail.
Even for a huge organisation like BHP Billiton, there are probably only
three key success factors – all the rest is icing on top. Being a resources
company, selling commodities, the key success factors are:
There are only a handful international scale resource companies. One had
not ensured the 2nd key success factor: having more projects in the pipeline
to replace those mines being exhausted.
Assessment Tools:
SWOT
Culture McKinsey 7S
Value Chain
Mapping
Internal and External Surveys
e.g. 3600
Systems,
Competencies
Structure
One of its goals was to establish its credentials as a policy maker and
adviser to Cabinet. So a key success factor was the ability to present quality
research with practical recommendations. Another key success factor was
being ―first to market‖ with these policy papers. Thus it would be the
preferred policy research body in its field.
If DEUS could not manage these two key success factors of quality
research and being first to provide it, then just about everything else would
be a forlorn waste of time.
Without these capabilities, DEUS was unlikely to achieve its goals. Either
DEUS must ensure or obtain these capabilities or it must devise some
strategies to get around these shortcomings (such as outsource to lean and
mean freelance researchers). The third alternative of changing the goal or
mission was possible but unlikely to be accepted as an optimal outcome.
Alas, DEUS did not establish these key capabilities quickly enough.
Research was slow to be published and not always considered to be well
researched or presented. In its formative period, management spent more
time on designing logos and furnishing offices than setting the capabilities
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of fast, good research. In short, DEUS did not deliver value to its
stakeholders.
At the same time, DEUS was facing competition for policy papers but did
not pay it much attention. The Treasury Department saw itself as the pre-
eminent policy department for all things economic and concerning major
infrastructure. It was a natural ―competitor‖ to DEUS. Whatever research
task was given to DEUS, Treasury would produce a better and faster report
on it whether it was tasked or not.
DEUS lost! Just three years after its formation, the Department was wound
up in April 2007. It did not add value to its clients for the costs involved.
The end output may be as simple as a statement defining your key abilities
that will form the basis of your operation and some acknowledgement (at
least privately) at what is not done well and should be avoided or
outsourced. You should also be able to see the best opportunities for new
tasks and the major threats that need to accounted in your strategy.
If we cannot fill the gap, can we devise a strategy where our shortcomings
are not so critical?
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Example: XPT Train to Armidale
Long ago in NSW when Neville Wran was Premier and David Hill was
running State Rail, Neville Wran promised the voters of Armidale that they
would have an XPT train service by August of that year.
Alas, there were not the resources to meet this promise without severely
reducing other services. Hill went to the Premier‘s office and stated: ―tell
the Premier he can have his XPT to Armidale but the cost will be another
$40 million required in the budget‖.
This was political awareness by Hill that the Premier would not be
gainsaid. Rather, he adjusted expectations of his key stakeholder and was
building the capabilities to deliver.
Analysis:
Do we have the key success
Culture factors?
Any weaknesses that could or
should be fixed?
How are we relative to the task
and other potential providers?
Systems,
Competencies
Structure
Figure 7.7 Analysis of Capabilities
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Key Points
1. Our second fundamental question is what capabilities are
needed to achieve our mission in the defined environment?
Add the myriad of tactics or micro strategies that may last only a few
months or even weeks as they are countered or lose efficacy with clients or
stakeholders. The end result is rich complexity and unique plans for action.
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We seek brilliant strategists who can devise and evaluate several strategies
and who can formulate a combination of integrated decisions that will aid
the implementation of those strategies.
Strategic Decision(s)
Figure 8.1 The Dimensions for Strategy Formulation
What is the time dimension? Is it long term over several years or medium
term over say the next few years or is it short term over the next year of
less?
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What is the dimension or level of the organisation? Is it for the whole
organisation or perhaps for one particular unit or even just one program in a
unit of the whole organisation?
Note that these dimensions are not randomly mixed. A Grand Strategy for
the whole organisation is high level and will be normally set on a long term
horizon of 5 years or more. A program activity is short term over a year or
less and will mostly comprise micro strategies and tactics.
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This does not mean you will not have detailed plans on the actions of your
simple strategy, But keep it manageable. Learn to break complex tasks into
manageable steps or bites. Learn to quickly simplify.
Vision /
Strategic
Intent
Grand Strategy
for Multi Task
Organisation
There are some points to be heeded from determining at which level we are
playing.
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First, what we do at the lower levels of our hierarchy needs to be tested for
congruence with the level above. We should only undertake executional
tactics that help us achieve the client or program strategies. Then, we
should only pursue client or program strategies that help our unit achieve
its goals. Then we should only undertake unit strategies that fit in with our
achievement of the overall goals of the department or agency. Loyalty is to
the next level above.
Third, the time frame normally shortens as we move down the hierarchy.
The overall vision and mission may never change or only evolve over many
years. Unit strategies may have a time frame of a few years. Programs may
run for perhaps a year. Executional tactics may have a life span of weeks.
Finally, we must know the long range plan and grand strategy before
devising the intermediate and short term plans. The grand strategy has
primacy. We do not want to initiate short term actions that may run counter
to achieving the long term goal(s).
Conduct Programs,
Assess Capabilities
Horizon 2 (1-3 yrs)
Grand Strategy
Mid Range Plan
Strategic Planning,
Budgets
1
Figure 8.3 Strategic Horizons
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The priority is to have the long range strategy and plan in place first even
though it is still general. We then work backwards in time to do the mid-
range strategy and plan and afterwards the short term strategic planning.
We must know the long range goals and plans before devising the shorter
term plans to ensure they are congruent with the long term.
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8.5.3 Assess Capabilities Platform
What are the capabilities of our organisation? Do we have what it takes?
Analytic techniques include the McKinsey 7S framework, SWOT analysis,
Value Chains and Competitor Mapping methods discussed earlier.
Value chain analysis can be extended beyond just the value chain for the
organisation to consider a value chain across the entire issue and to show
our organisation‘s role within this enlarged chain.
What are the two or three things we must do right in order to succeed? If
you do not achieve these factors, everything else will just be window
dressing.
This is where we are now at. We want to examine how to find possible
strategies.
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8.5.7 Strategic Decisions
In the next step, we will select the most appropriate strategy or strategies to
implement. (See the next chapter for details).
SWOT analysis summarises all of our analysis to provide a logical lead into
suitable strategies.
Indeed, this logical lead into strategy formulation is probably the most
useful feature and use of SWOT analysis.
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Reality is that businesses devise rich and complex strategies and that they
segment their activities manifold with separate strategies for each segment.
Each public sector organisation has its own unique mission, its own
environment and its own capabilities. Therefore, the strategies that are
appropriate for one organisation will not adequately suit another
organisation. Each organisation has its unique circumstances and therefore,
its unique strategic choices.
Kanter raised four new bases for competitive advantage that have some
application to public sector management today:
core competence
time compression
continuous improvement
relationships.
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Core Competence is the distinctive skill(s) the organisation does better
than other organisations offering the product or service.
One of the relationships that Kanter saw was stakeholder alliances. These
are formed between complementary stakeholders along different stages of
the value chain.
They have mostly employed the case study approach. Military strategists
pore over past battles. They are dissected and examined and re-enacted.
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What was done, what was not done and what could have been done are
studied. Then new situations are hypothesised and the military students
assess the strategic options and formulate battle plans. These are evaluated
by experienced practitioners or else they are run through simulations –
either in the classroom or on the field (war games).
It is from working through many examples – both case studies and reading
– that the student of strategy builds competence and fluency. This is similar
to our aspiring chess grand masters who pore over thousands of games
played by masters.
The ultimate test, of course, is to run a situation in real life. However, this
does not necessarily lead to the best learning since a real life play can
usually only accommodate one ―answer‖ or strategy at a time – the one that
is implemented. As well, it may take several years before the success of the
strategy can be determined.
So after learning the principles and guidelines of strategy, the public sector
manager then needs to gain practice and breadth by considering many
examples and undertaking several good case study assessments.
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8.10 Creativity in Strategy Formulation
However, you do not have to follow anyone‘s prescription or past
successes.
Most situations have their own unique characteristics and your solutions
may need to be unique. Consultants or others espousing a generic strategy
are to be avoided.
Do not repeat the tactics that won you a victory, but vary them
according to the circumstances.
Can you be creative and innovative? Certainly you will look at other
examples but be free to adjust, adapt or modify.
Developing Strategies:
Developing Strategies: What do we have to do
Synthesis of external and and what can we do.
internal analysis within
guidelines of the mission. Logic deduction
Creativity
Look at examples
Ask others
Strategic Choices
Strategic Decision(s)
Figure 8.4 Summary of Strategy Formulation
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Can we avoid the crowd and find creative responses to the situation?
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Key Points
1. When we analyse our environment and our capabilities early,
we usually can develop several potential strategies.
5. Our strategies can range from the long term grand strategy
for the whole organisation down to the short term strategies
and tactics of a program or activity.
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9. Step 3b: Assessing and Deciding Strategies
What should we do?
Risk: How do your strategies rate in terms of risk? What will they cost
your department or agency or program if they go wrong or do not achieve
the goals? How can your strategies be changed or mitigated as risks arise?
Is your strategy robust or is it so fragile that the slightest problem will
cause failure?
Apt: Are your strategies apt or appropriate for the environment as per your
analysis? Do the strategies fit with your organisation or unit capabilities?
Do you have what it takes to implement these strategies?
Flexible: Are the strategies flexible or adaptable? Given the rapid pace of
change in many environments today, adaptable or flexible strategies have
considerable value. Interestingly, this echoes some of the thoughts of the
―father of modern military strategy‖, von Clausewitz (1780-1831).
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How difficult or expensive would it be to adjust or abandon the strategy if
it is not working? This is sometimes referred to as low regret.
Note that a flexible or adaptable strategy does not mean we throw out the
entire strategy. Rather, can we quickly modify or adapt elements of the
strategy to meet the fluid conditions in which we operate?
We should at least consider all the points in the CRAFT mnemonic when
determining which strategic choices to make.
If there is any priority to the above criteria it is virtually as per the name.
First, the strategy has to be congruent and be about delivering our higher
order goals. Risk is a major factor and the strategy must be apt to the
external conditions and internal capabilities.
Do not delude yourself into thinking you will derive an iron clad master
plan with detailed steps.
In our rapidly changing world, we need a sense of direction more than ever
for our organisation. The days of having detailed directions are long gone.
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9.2 Testing Strategic Choices
In addition to using the CRAFT framework to review and assess our
possible strategies, we may also seek more information regarding the
probability of success of our strategies and to check whether we have
considered major risks.
In part, this can be done by studying widely. What has happened in similar
situations in other times or other places?
We may well run simulation and scenario analysis to test the effects and
outcomes of our chosen strategies.
The major differences to just using a case study are that we ―play out‖
scenes which will include people taking the role of clients, suppliers,
stakeholders, staff, competing agencies and so on. As well, we can play real
scenarios: what is happening for our organisation rather than looking at
some third party case.
Well run scenario analysis can be very insightful. At the least, it forces us
to consider game theory and reactions to our strategies and tactics. Rather
than be a simple rehash of what we already know, the reactions of other
players in the scenario gives us pause to stop and reconsider.
Scenario analysis is also useful for making staff feel included in the
strategic development process.
9.2.2 Simulation
Simulation and scenario analysis are terms that can be sometimes used
interchangeably. In this text, we will define simulation as computer
simulated scenarios or modelling.
The public sector is known for large and complex computer simulations of
the economy. However, it can be worthwhile to run some simpler
simulations on smaller scale policy decisions.
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The simulations left the Treasury officers flummoxed as to why there was
such lobbying for cuts in the corporate tax rate. The answer is that is a ―free
kick‖. It does a minor boost to after tax profits with no effort required.
Some logic and primary school maths also expose the myths. Small
business tax rate was reduced from 30% to 28.5% from July 2015. This was
supposed to lead to benefits such as more employment by small businesses.
Let us check the logic. A small business is generally defined for tax
purpose with revenue of less than $2 million. Most small businesses
struggle to achieve a 10% margin on sales. So that would give a profit
before tax of $200,000 for the largest of small businesses. So the tax cut
from 30% to 28.5% means a boost of $3,000 for the largest of the small
businesses and less for smaller small businesses! How many extra
employees will be hired with this tax windfall of $3,000 or less?
The main outcome of simulation is not the results of our policy but to test it
for sensitivity. As we change parameters (for example the take up rate for a
relief package or use of a new transport system), we see how sensitive or
robust the policy is to small changes in the parameters. It is a risk indicator.
We first test the assumptions in our model to see if they are realistic.
Calculating the break-even volume for new project takes moments and
would save a fortune in doomed projects. We have seen projects require
more than the national population to be users in order to break even.
130
The tunnel is only 2.1 kms long but required 8.5 kms of tunnelling to build.
Construction cost was initially set at $680 million and major work
commenced in January 2003. However, construction costs blew out to
about $800 million and some reports say the total cost was $1 billion.
On August 8 2005, Sydney‘s cross city tunnel was opened by the then
premier, Morris Iemma with then Roads Minister Joe Tripodi by his side.
For the tunnel and the politicians, popularity proved to be elusive. By the
end of the next year, it was in receivership owing over $US500 million to
the syndicate of 16 Australian and overseas banks.
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Well the Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) awarded the contract, possibly
more based on the size of the upfront fee it received than on the merits of
the relative proposals. The winning consortium paid the RTA $80 million
to $105 million (depending on which source you believe) for the right to
build the tunnel – more than double what other consortia offered. It was
estimated that 50 cents of the toll was due to attempts to recover this fee.
But the numbers only stacked up if enough motorists used the tunnel and
paid the assumed toll.
The tunnel was vehemently opposed by most motorists due to the many
road closures around the Sydney CBD done so that skirting the use of the
tunnel would incur substantial time penalties. Motorists still voted with
their tyres by diligently avoiding the tunnel as a protest.
You might recall the mission of the RTA and wonder how these actions fit
with the mission:
RTA mission
Delivery of the best road transport outcomes balancing the needs of
public transport passengers, cyclists, pedestrians, motorists and
commercial operators.
Cynics would argue that the RTA was focused on the up-front fee and acted
to support it with road closures contrary to its mission.
The ―winning‖ consortium modelled on 30,000 cars per day using the
tunnel initially, ramping up to 90,000 cars by the end of its first year. It is
estimated the project needed 70,000 cars per day to meet the loan servicing.
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Hyder simply aggregated all the east-west routes across the city in a wide
band and assigned a proportion to the tunnel. The breadth of the potential
corridor appears to have been way too wide and traffic in the extremities
continued to travel on established surface streets. [This was despite the
RTA trying to close off routes in order to force motorists into the tunnel.]
Hyder also predicted strong annual growth in the number of car users with
nearly 200,000 vehicles per day by 2034.
So there seem to have been very little rigour and great optimism in
estimating the critical success factor for the project: how many vehicles
would use the tunnel.
Even if Hyder had got the numbers right on demand, someone forgot to use
the calculator of commonsense on supply. A 2x2 lane highway can only
handle about 50,000 to 70,000 vehicles per day with standard distribution
of traffic. So even if the Cross City Tunnel could have demand for 90,000
cars per day, it could not manage to put them through the tunnels without
major delays. As for nearly 200,000 cars per day in the later years of the
project life, you would need 8 lanes of tunnels, not 4.
At the full priced tolls, the most number of users ever recorded was 30,000
cars per day, less than half of break even. Even at half price tolls, less than
40,000 cars used the tunnel.
So a billion dollars was spent based on fairyland projections that could not
even be physically achieved. This may help explain other private - public –
partnership failures including railway links to airports in Brisbane and
Sydney.
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Postscript
The Tunnel project was bought from the receivers by Royal Bank of
Scotland, EISER Infrastructure Partners and Leighton Contractors in 2007.
In September 2013, still well under break-even with less than 40,000 cars a
day and the State Government claiming $64 million stamp duty on the
purchase, the new owners put the project into receivership for the second
time.
The tool does not aim to be precise but instead plots impacts against
probabilities, normally just into high, medium and low categories.
If you can manage to assign a high / medium / low (or similar) ranking to
the probability of an event occurring in the time period of your strategic
planning, you are doing well.
Next, categorise the impact such an event would have: again, high /
medium / low will suffice. The impact need not be expressed in monetary
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units. It could be in lives or welfare or embarrassment to the agency or
department (sometimes called reputation risk).
High
Critical Factors:
Influential
Important and
Clear trend
Uncertain - model
Importance
/ Impact Moderate
Influential In
factors but
not focus of attention
Low
Low Moderate High
Probability
Figure 9.1 Decision Impact Matrix
The top right hand corner of high probability of occurring and high impact
if it does occur is not the scenario we model. It is so clearly our main
priority that it should form our base case. This situation is what our
strategies should address.
The bottom of the diagram and to the left of the matrix does not command
much attention from us. Otherwise we will waste too much time chasing
shadows and considering every possibility.
It is the factors with the high impact but with low to moderate probability
of occurring that attract our simulation and scenario testing. What will
135
happen if these events occur and what should we do about them? Perhaps
we need some contingency plans. Perhaps we may need to modify our base
case strategy so that it is more flexible and can more readily handle an
occurrence of these critical factors.
Our strategy may have a sunset and may have achieved its aims. So neither
the strategy nor its program should continue. Should the Legacy charity
continue on today? Has it passed its use-by- date?
The current CEO of Legacy is seeking to redefine its mission to give the
organisation relevance today. On its web page, Legacy claims it looks after
100,000 widows. This seems a very high number given our lack of major
wars for nearly 50 years. The pictures and stories are all of the elderly who
are already receiving pensions and services from other agencies.
We must review the efficacy of our strategies and change when necessary
(preferably change before it is necessary).
However, it would be a grave error to consider that the analysis and the
strategy development are rigidly formula driven.
Two of the most valuable attributes of the strategist are creativity and risk
taking.
To be able to break the mould and devise a new strategy that achieves the
results faster, better and more efficiently than ever thought possible is the
ultimate achievement for the strategist.
We then test our strategies. We check against our mission to ensure we are
still moving towards the bigger picture. We conduct scenario and
simulation analysis to consider the risks and impacts.
The diagram below summarises some of the tools available to the strategist
for choosing appropriate strategies.
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Choosing Strategies:
Scenario / simulation
Poll stakeholders
Cost / benefit analysis
Sustainability
Choosing Strategies:
Congruence
Risk
Testing Strategies: Strategic Choices Apt / Adaptable
Do we need to adjust Fit
capabilities or even Timely
adjust the mission?
Assessing Strategies:
Testing Strategies: Do they meet our goals?
Impact Matrix Do we have the capability?
Simulation What cost?
Scenarios Strategic Decision(s) What risks?
Figure 9.2 Strategic Choice Tools
3. Revise the mission. Argue and market for a change in the mission
to one that can be achieved.
This last alternative was the smart move by the Reserve Bank of Australia.
138
Key Points
139
If our future is no longer attractive, can we reinvent ourselves and our mission?
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10. Plans and Actions
Setting the mission and objectives was the prelude to the strategic process.
We then covered the strategic process steps of:
External analysis
The culmination of the analysis is the devising of specific plans and their
implementation into action. This is a field of study in itself and beyond our
defined scope of strategy for this book. Yet without action, strategy is
impotent. So some overview of planning with a call to action is offered.
10.1 Plans
Plans are a ―scheme of action or procedure: a plan of operations‖
(Macquarie Dictionary).
Plans are the co-ordination of tasks and operations to fulfil the objectives.
By meeting the objectives, we should achieve the goals. By meeting the
goals, we should be moving towards achieving the mission.
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There is the broad long term plan which will encompass major strategic
directions. This may be a 5 or 10 year plan.
There will be a detailed one year plan. This is often called the budget
although that is really only the expenses with perhaps some revenues.
The one year plan will have detailed actions and responsibilities and will
have the budget as a financial subset of the one year plan. As much as
possible, most of its numbers will be eventually expressed in dollar units.
Preferably, as we have said, the one year plan is more than just the budget
numbers. It is the scanning of the environment and assessment of our
capabilities, even in just the one year horizon, that makes our planning
“strategic planning”.
10.2 Measurement
A major cause of disconnect between strategies and implementation is the
failure or inability to measure outcomes in a timely manner.
Even if we have trouble defining “good outcome”, we can still refine our
measurement.
The detailed plans will have timetables and names of those responsible for
delivering on certain actions. When people are accountable and their
outcomes are checked within time frames, things happen.
The strategic plan must be a living plan – not something done to appease
the hierarchy and then consigned to a bottom drawer.
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Used (at least in monthly reviews)
Have responsibilities assigned
Have milestones
Linked to budget
To implement, we need:
A committed leadership
At least minimal levels of the McKinsey 7S factors: structure, staff,
skills, strategy, systems, style, shared goals
A plan to implement (seriously, you need to plan to implement the
plan to overcome the negative forces and obstructions)
A want
we can
fulfil
Correct
Review / Adjust Within
Results Mission
Monitor,
External
Accountable
Analysis
Implement
Do it! Capability
Analysis
Resourcing
Budgets Strategic
Choices
Action
Test
Plans
Strategic CRAFT
Decision
There are numerous tools to aid planning. A simple and effective visual
representation of plan tasks and responsibilities is the Gantt chart. Time
lines and responsibilities are clearly shown and the order of tasks depicted.
A simple Gantt chart for building a demonstration fish farming facility in
Mauritius is shown.
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Mauritius Aquaculture Planning Gannt Chart
Agree to Proceed
Site Selection,
Community Approval
Equipment Specification
First
Fingerlings
Growing
Knowledge Transfer
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Months:
Time Line
Identify the longest or critical path through the network. To have the
shortest project time, this is the path that cannot afford to be delayed.
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10.4 Have Your Strategy and Plans Succeed
First we recognise that a good strategy and plan do not guarantee success.
They give a good reasoned chance of success.
Sometimes a strategy and plan flounder because all the planets were
aligned against them. They were swamped by recession or a sudden
disruptive technology or change of political will. It happens. Fortunately,
with good strategy, planning and implementation, it happens rarely. A great
strategy should also have considered and taken into account such critical
risks.
Very rarely, poor strategy and planning achieve the results. It is as likely as
Steven Bradbury winning gold at the 2002 Winter Olympics in the 1,000
metre sprint. You would need all the front runners to fall over and you to be
so far behind you could skate around their tangled mess. It is so rare it is
newsworthy and now many years ago!
Alas, we too often find that our strategic plans do not deliver the results we
had planned or hoped and not because of bad luck.
147
Generally, it is our ineffectual implementation of strategies that causes the
most shortfall in strategy, rather than the strategy itself.
Leaders take a complex situation and weave a story that explains what is
happening and what the organisation is going to do. These leaders simplify
a complex world and give us direction.
Such a simple message does not mean the leaders are simple or that their
analysis is simple. If questioned on their story, good leaders can
demonstrate the logic and detail behind it. But they tell the audience a
simplified version. Good story tellers adjust the message for different
audiences: boards; staff; clients; Ministers.
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Killers of Strategy
Michael Beer and Russel Eisenstat, (Sloan Management Review, Summer
2000) wrote of ―The Silent Killers of Strategy Implementation and
Learning‖. They list six killers of strategy:
Consider organisations that exhibit several of these factors and you will
find an organisation that is unable to implement its strategy (Sydney Ferries
example again).
Beer and Eisenstat then show the changes that need to be made to these
strategy killers in order to have implementation:
5. Effective co-ordination
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Gary Hamel goes even further in his Rules for Radicals, developed in
Competing for the Future with CK Prahalad in 1996 and Leading the
Revolution (2002).
Alinsky started in the poor neighbourhoods of Chicago. His belief was that
that the most effective means are whatever achieves the desired ends. He
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thus echoes Machiavelli but he makes Machiavelli look ―soft‖ and
compassionate by comparison.
The first rule: Power is not only what you have but what the enemy
thinks you have.
The fourth rule: Make the enemy live up to their own book of rules.
You can kill them with this, for they can no more
obey their own rules than the Christian church can
live up to Christianity.
The sixth rule: A good tactic is one that your people enjoy. If your
people are not having a ball doing it, there is
something very wrong with the tactic.
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The seventh rule: A tactic that drags on too long becomes a drag. Man
can sustain militant interest in any issue for only a
limited time, after which it becomes a ritualistic
commitment.
The eighth rule: Keep the pressure on, with different tactics and
actions, and utilise all events of the period for your
purpose.
The ninth rule: The threat is usually more terrifying than the thing
itself.
The tenth rule: The major premise for tactics is the development of
operations that will maintain a constant pressure
upon the opposition.
The eleventh rule: If you push a negative hard and deep enough it will
break through into its counterside; this is based on
the principle that every positive has its negative.
The thirteenth rule: Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize
it.
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The other important point in the choosing of a target is that it must be a
personification, not something general and abstract such as a community‘s
segregated practices or a major corporation or the Government. It is not
possible to develop the necessary hostility against, say, the Government, or
against a corporation, which has no soul or identity.
[Alinsky says your target should be a person in the organisation you are
opposing; a face within the opposition for you to focus on; it must be
someone with power within the organisation, like the CEO, Department
Secretary, school principal, Premier or Prime Minister.]
In our strategies, we seek win / win outcomes and not win / lose. We also
need to live with our decisions and stakeholders in the longer term.
10.5 Summary
The most damning criticism of strategic management is that it does not
always deliver the superior results we planned.
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We too often do not ―sell the plan‖ but instead have either some fluffy
motherhood statements or else so much complexity that little is understood.
A successful plan includes a section on how it will be marketed and how
stakeholders will be brought to support it.
Lack of follow through and not devoting adequate resources are other
common failings.
The summary processes in the planning and moving to action are depicted
below.
Users/
Clients Actions
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We will finish this book with practical recommendations on how to
improve your strategic analysis and formulation and how to improve the
implementation of your plans.
But it was escapes from custody that were proving the most embarrassing
to the Government and its Minister for Corrective Services. In 1995/96,
escapes from open custody ran out at 4.8 per 100 inmates (4 times the
national average).
Media shock jocks were having a field day lambasting the Government.
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As one of his Ministers said:
―Anyone can run Corrective Services when Ron Woodham is in charge‖ -
John Hatzistergos.
Escape rates generally stayed low with the occasional blip such as from
secure custody in 2009.
As well, with political pushes for stricter sentencing, jails were becoming
crowded and expensive. It was costing a billion dollars a year to run
Corrective Services.
Cost pressures, allied with a desire to reduce recidivism meant that the
Government‘s goals became more complicated. Richer strategies than
―locking them up‖ were needed. In 2011/12 time out of cells for secure
inmates was less than 6.9 hours a day compared to the national average of
9.3 hours. Ron Woodham‘s position was not helped by 2011 being a ―blip
year‖ when escapes rose slightly.
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The new Commissioner was Peter Severin and
he generally describes his position as Chief
Executive rather than Commissioner.
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The highlights of the year (below) reflect the changed priority of goals:
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Key Points
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11. Conclusion and Suggestions for Success
11.1 Wrap Up
We began by asking should ―Strategy‖ apply in the Public Sector.
Given the importance of the performance of the Public Sector to our society
and welfare, the answer is unreservedly yes!
While there have been models about public choice, there has been
insufficient attention given to public sector strategy. Public Sector strategy
needs are different to those in the business sector. There are more complex
social issues; there are diverse stakeholders; measurements are not always
monetary; and, there are tighter resource restrictions.
Consequently, Public Sector managers are being pressed for more output
and more relevance with few of the tools, models and other resources
available to the private sector counterpart.
In particular, we find that the setting of the mission in the Public Sector is
more important and difficult than the generally accepted private sector
goals of profitability or shareholder value.
Both private and public sector managers need to answer the three basic
questions of:
1. What is happening and where is it going?
(Environmental Analysis)
Much of this experience will come from reading, examples and case
studies, as well as the more expensive ―school of hard knocks‖.
The astute manager will then assess the possible strategic choices to
determine which choices are the better options.
Lastly, we need to sell or market the plan to have buy-in and to enact the
plan.
A good strategy should achieve the ends or goals while remaining ethical
and without reputation risk.
We have outlined a process and shown some tools to help with the task.
However, intelligence, awareness and practice are the keys to developing
fluency and expertise.
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Following are some of the tips garnered over the years from ours and
others‘ experiences.
9. Sell! Sell! Sell! Just because you have a worthwhile mission and
great strategy does not mean that everyone is interested or on
board. You need to sell your mission and plans: to the Minister;
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to other stakeholders; to clients; to staff. Tell a tailored story to
each group and tell it often.
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A Capstone Example
Examples have been included through the text – some positive and some
negative (what not to do).
We finish with an example that shows many smart moves. It covers setting
strategic stretch goals, aligning systems and measurements to the changed
goals, changing structure and staff. It also follows most of our suggestions.
Milestones and quick wins were programmed in, allies built and negative
forces sidelined.
This case story has its background about forensic testing of crime evidence.
While reading the case, you might consider some of the aspects of the
McKinsey 7S model and the use of stretch goals to deliver a vastly
improved strategic outcome. As well, this was done with less resources, so
efficiency was also gained, in addition to the improved effectiveness.
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State of Forensics in the State
By 2010, the Forensics Services Group of the NSW Police was falling
behind.
There were about 40,000 crime exhibits sitting untouched with an average
backlog of 8 months. Some exhibits went back to crimes of 3 years
previous. There was a 6 months backlog of DNA samples. There were
2,200 fingerprints waiting to be assessed, representing a 3 month backlog.
This was certainly not best policing practice and not in keeping with the
overall mission of a safe and secure New South Wales.
More money and resources had been put into Forensic services over the
years to try and improve the situation but without lasting benefit. Spending
more money or investing in more resources was not solving the problem.
Nor would small operational improvements make much of a dent in the
backlog.
New Leader
Jeff Loy had joined the Police Force aged
21 inspired by the song Echo Beach by
Martha and the Muffins. It was the line in
the song about ―my job is very boring,
I‘m an office clerk‖ that led Jeff to
change jobs and join the Police.
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Some 30 years later, Jeff applied for the promotion position to head
Forensics. He impressed the selection committee with his ideas on how to
get the Group on track. He promised great improvement.
When he took charge, there were nearly 1,000 staff members with slightly
more unsworn (civilian) staff compared to sworn police officers.
When Jeff started, he asked the management team to come up with a goal
for improvement. They responded with a target reduction of 5% in the
backlog over the next 12 months. This would take the backlog from 40,000
exhibits to maybe 38,000 exhibits over a year.
This is hardly inspirational and certainly not achieving the level of service
needed to meet the Police Service Mission.
It was a soft and easy target and could be achieved with just some
operational efficiencies. In any case, the managers did not really expect to
achieve even this modest improvement but it sounded like an easy response
to the new leader without having to do much change.
Jeff rejected this target and simply imposed one: 50% reduction in 12
months. This is leading not administering. It was an inspirational goal. It is
sometimes known as the BHAG: Big Hairy Audacious Goal.
While you probably will not write this goal into your budget, you do state it
to your staff and go for it. Even achieving half of such a goal will still be a
major improvement.
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To achieve a BHAG, you need to move. You need to do new things and to
do old things in a different manner. You need to think and act strategically.
What is Happening
After setting the inspirational goal, Step 1 is to determine what is
happening.
We do not need to spend vast time studying to the nth degree and finest
detail. A good approximation will suffice. With a tight schedule, keep a
sense of urgency. This keeps focus and wrong foots the negative forces. We
intend to change what is happening anyway.
There were reports and the list of the backlogs. But we need to know why it
is happening: what are the causal factors. In other words, we need to
analyse the data to get a clear view.
At the time, the Chief Scientist was the main figure in the operational side.
Scientists of course have personal goals of peer recognition and values of
scientific integrity of their work rather than fast response times.
In part, this was achieved by having the culture align to treating the client
as paramount. In this case, it was the police in the field (and ultimately
crime victims). It also required having a sworn officer put in charge of
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operations rather than the Chief Scientist to ensure this focus on the clients.
So structure was changed to align with the strategy.
The laboratory scientists now reported to this Police officer and their prime
purpose now was to focus on servicing the needs of field police officers:
their clients.
As part of what was happening, Jeff went, in his words, ―on a journey of
discovery‖ to find out what the Forensic Services Group did and how it did
it. He went through reports and mapped out the processes.
Process mapping can be a useful tool and is akin to value chain analysis.
Where did the Forensic Services Group add value and where did it carry
out processes that did little to help the clients? Where were the bottlenecks
reducing response times?
What can we do to achieve the inspirational goal? The ideas rarely come
from a vacuum though. Logic and deduction help (such as using the SWOT
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tool). So too does looking at other examples and modifying them such as
Queensland‘s operations.
For example, as already mentioned, there had been several reports on the
performance of the Forensics Services Group.
This follows the Pareto Rule. Pareto was a mathematician and philosopher.
You might know it better as the 80:20 rule. 80% of outcomes are caused by
just 20% of the population. For example, 80% of your staffing headaches
come from just 20% of your staff. 80% of your successful work comes
from just another 20% of your staff, Concentrate on the top 20% before
worrying about the bottom 80%.
Ideas could come from anywhere. It is the leader‘s job to make sure the
best ideas are implemented. For example, one sergeant‘s wife was a nurse
and she gave ideas on how hospitals treat laboratory specimens.
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It is common sense but that does not mean obvious or easy to implement.
From the Sunday Telegraph article: ―While sub-sampling has become the
hero of NSW forensics, implementing it was no easy task. Whatever the
pain of getting the system online, the results appear to speak for
themselves,‖ Mr Loy said.
"Now, sub-sampling is done at the police station, it's sent by courier to the
DAL and the samples go in the robot the next day."
Forensic Science Services Branch. NSW Police Force. Russell Plummer (Technical)
Sergeant, Forensic Supervisor. Fingerprint Laboratory, Pemulwuy Picture: Angelo Soulas
Source: The Sunday Telegraph
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Some early wins were programmed – picking the low hanging fruit. A
specialist review team was formed and went through every case in the
backlog. This resulted in about 25% of the backlog being culled because
the case had by now been resolved anyway or the DNA profile was too
weak to yield a reliable result.
So, as is typical, the strategic plan was not just one action but many. The
key is to have them integrated into an overall master plan or grand
strategy. Then the various component plans can be delegated.
The benefit is near real time scanning and results. Rather than take prints
and send them to the lab to be catalogued and later checked, the prints are
scanned to a phone on the scene and transmitted instantly to the fingerprint
computer. The record to date between scanning the prints at a crime scene
and making the arrest is 45 minutes. The burglar was still on his way home
with the stolen goods when arrested. That is good client service!
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Results and Outcomes
Obviously there is more detail to the actions but you have seen the main
initiatives. Today, the Forensic Services Group is a 24/7 operation to
provide around the clock service.
The DNA backlog no longer exists. Fingerprints are nearly all assessed
within 24 hours and a daily report is required on the few exceptions not
completed in that time.
In 2012, the Group even came in under budget with savings of $2 million.
44 positions had been deleted (clerks have been replaced by automated
recording) and 12 new needed positions added.
Goals were changed and measurements aligned to the new goals. A sense
of purpose and achievement was built.
The statistics show the improvements to date. By April 2013, there was no
backlog on fingerprints. It is a great success story!
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