By Maurice Adams, consultant at Action Planning.
During the early stages of Covid disruption, there was a sense of “it will be good when we get back to normal”. This subtly changed to “we had better get used to the ‘new normal’”. Now it seems that even ‘normal’ is questionable.
Organisations face uncertainties even during ‘normal’ times. These challenges are usually handled by the established structures and systems we have put in place. But when uncertainty escalates to a crisis, the usual way of coping can become overstressed. This pandemic is the current crisis. It is inevitable that we will need to contend with others.
How should charity CEOs plan in this changeable environment in which we operate?
Planning for the unpredictable
Two exercises should be considered: strategic forecasting and organisation stress testing. Both refer to an organisation’s adaptability, resilience and capacity. This is where external consultants can usefully add value.
Most of us have been involved with strategic planning but may not have given attention to strategic forecasting. This is not an exercise in foretelling the future, but it does offer a helpful guide as to what needs to be considered and how we might be prepared.
We have depended on well crafted strategic plans and methodically prepared annual operating plans, but these can be too rigid a structure for when a timely response is required in a time of crisis. When leaders consider ‘strategic planning’ they should construct and connect the elements that will guide their organisation when the (predictably) unpredictable events occur. Those who do not will struggle to evolve and survive.
Testing the plan
Adaptable and resilient organisations need to have an operating model that promotes continuous learning and cultivates flexible responses as situations evolve. This will include leadership flexibility, collective capability and response rapidity that impacts the entire organisation.
An organisation stress test (different to a risk management review) addresses these factors and questions how prepared the organisation is by envisaging how quickly and successfully it could recover from disruptions and shock by considering such information as early warning system data collection and analysis, team structure, crisis response mechanisms and communication channels.
Annual operating plans are important and help to prioritise activities. Arguably it is an easier process to define how things will be done as opposed to identifying the unknown: what is known can be measured and can be managed. If you are confident that you will achieve your goals, then your strategy is probably safe and organisation control (and CEO success!) is more likely. But as we have learned, life isn’t always going to be like that. There is no ‘normal’.