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PERSPECTIVES
Business Planning Approaches
– The Crucial Differences
by Mark W. Womack |
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Is Your Approach to Business
Planning Limiting Your Potential?
Our clients have greatly benefited from the below
classification of approaches to business planning within the
context of visioning, organization planning and goal-setting…
FOUR APPROACHES TO PLANNING
(Ackoff, 1981):
1. REACTIVE
2. INACTIVE
3. PREACTIVE
4. PROACTIVE
Here’s a summary of the four approaches:
REACTIVE PLANNING
is focused on a backwards look at what’s happened and the results
that have been achieved. Future plans are predicated on reasoning
and decisions based on the past and what can be gleaned from
it.
This tends to cause businesses to ignore or resist
(intentionally or inadvertently) the changes and trends that
are taking place. This type of planning implies a static environment,
which is usually far from the reality in the 21st Century.
INACTIVE PLANNING is the business
version of “going with the flow” and counting on your ability
to make things work out. This is essentially a lack of due consideration
and precision regarding business planning. This approach entails
a high degree of risk for those willing to bet their businesses
in this way.
PREACTIVE PLANNING is the approach
used by most business enterprises. This type of planning follows
the paradigm that your organization should be shaped to best
fit into the future.
This approach focuses on predicting the future
and how it will affect the business and then planning to prepare
for that future. Such predictions are largely based on the identification
and analysis of trends.
An important finding for us about this type of
planning is that businesses that use this approach typically
think they are on the cutting-edge of forward thinking. The
truth is that they’re not even close. An in-depth understanding
of the next approach makes this clear.
PROACTIVE PLANNING is the most challenging approach and
demands the most from leaders who use it. This type of planning
is practiced by leaders who believe they can shape
the future by their actions.
This approach follows the paradigm that organizations
can envision and then create their own future. It doesn’t ignore
the need for organizations to plan for and respond to things
in the environment that are beyond their control – both threats
as well as opportunities – it simply enables organizations to
boldly shape their best future.
We recommend proactive planning. We encourage business
leaders to INVENT THEIR PREFERRED
FUTURE and lead their organizations to it. The truth
is that the implications for leaders who put forth a plan for
achieving a bold vision are more than most are willing to take
on. Consequently, the potential legacy is more than most leaders
ever achieve.