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суббота, 22 июля 2023 г.

How to Measure Strategic Impact in a ‘Right Now’ World

 The focus of most strategy and measurement efforts used to be long term. We encouraged clients to step back from the day-to-day whirlwind of daily operational activities and firefighting and think about desired long-term objectives. The word “impact” implies this more reflective thinking.

But the strategic environment has changed quickly for many of our clients, causing them to rethink this attitude to better react to what is being called the “right now” world. Whether it is post-COVID changes, political turmoil, inflation, or the tragedy in Ukraine, some clients are being forced to adapt to threats like never before. And some technology clients have long insisted that strategic agility was an absolute requirement for their success.

So how should a strategy or measurement professional adapt to this new environment? As usual, the most important factors are either related to culture or process.

Culturally, organizations must think of strategy and measurement in terms of general principles rather than absolutes. Strategy is not an event. Strategic thinking is a skill that can be applied to any endeavor over just about any time frame. As many OKR experts such as Felipe Castro and Dan Montgomery will point out, if our old static 5-year strategic plan is no longer useful due to a rapidly changing world, the principles of connecting dots and articulating desired strategic outcomes need to be applied in a more iterative manner that that can be used to validate (or not) shorter-term strategic hypotheses. If top-down culture and long feedback cycles are not effective anymore, use those articulated desired outcomes to create shorter-term alignment and faster performance cadences. Measurement and reporting need not be relatively static exercises done by the special few at the organization level. They are skills that should be taught to all managers and supervisors so that they can effectively do their daily job.


Of course, most improvement happens at the process level. BSI has a new KPI development process, called the Measure-Perform-Review-Adapt (MPRA) model. While we will be announcing more about that model at a later date, the key point for this blog is that the new model places the emphasis on a regular cycle of review and adaptation. We start by articulating and communicating strategic intent before measures are considered, selected, and defined. Then in the Perform-Review-Adapt cycle the organization has a chance to react quickly to changes in the strategic environment or reforecast targets for the next quarter. For many of our clients that were in the habit of setting their KPI targets and then forgetting them, this review cycle is the missing discipline needed to keep their teams on track and to get things done. It borrows the key principle from the agile world that assumes that we cannot possibly know everything about what we want at the beginning of the process and so need discipline around learning and adaptation.


https://balancedscorecard.org/



суббота, 1 июля 2023 г.

10 Steps of How to Implement the Value Chain Concept Successfully

 The value chain is one of the most powerful strategic tools. Michael Porter (the originator of the value chain concept) uses this tool to define what strategy is. However, the work of Porter looks more focused on strategy formulation than on strategy execution. There is a gap between understanding the concept of the value chain and implement it. So, let’s go to analyze how to implement in 10 steps the value chain tool successfully.

Infographic adapted from SCOR Process Framework (Supply Chain Council): How to Implement the Value Chain


The 10 steps of value chain

The first step is defining the Business Strategy of the firm. I mean defining our main Value Discipline (Operational Excellence, Customer Intimacy or Product Leadership according to Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema) or our Core Business (Infrastructure Management, Customer Relationship Management or Product Innovation according to John Hagel III and Marc Singer). Be aware that both are quite similar strategic frameworks to define our strategy. The good point of these approaches to strategy is that those are probably more specific than Porter Generic Strategies (Cost Leadership, Differentiation, and Focus). This is important because the Value Discipline and Core Business frameworks make a better fit between strategy and processes/activities. Processes/activities are the key element for implementation.

In 1996, Porter in his famous HBR article “What Is Strategy?” declared that Operational Effectiveness is not a strategy. He explained that Japanese companies rarely have strategies and those were based on Operational Effectiveness in the 1980s. He suggested that competitors could quickly imitate best practices, management techniques, and so on. However, after two decades from the publication of the article the reality is other. Japanese companies (Toyota, Honda, Bridgestone, Canon, Ricoh, Seiko, Sony, Panasonic, Nikon, Yamaha, etc.) still enjoy of an important Sustainable Competitive Advantage. So, according to the facts we should consider that Operational Excellence is a working strategy.

Some of the Operational Effectiveness tools (benchmarking, best practices, performance management, change management, and so on) are helping us to implement the concept of the value chain despite the Value Discipline chosen.

The second step could be called Configuration. Now, we are aligning the Value Discipline chosen with some of the main functional strategies (Business Model, Marketing, Production, Logistics/Stock, and Performance). This step helps us to define our business strategy deeper in order to have an actionable strategy.

Many firms used to fail in the strategy execution rather than in the strategy formulation process. Failed strategies that demand a turnaround used to involve re-focusing on target industries, product, markets or activities of the value chain. So, the configuration step is one of the most important steps analyzing the value chain. Usually a BCG Matrix or other strategic portfolio tools should be used to get a deeper inside.

The third step is Segmentation. There is a common mistake that is “trying to be everything to all customers.” This used to mean that we are not able to excel in any particular segment because we lose focus. Without the correct focus (segmentation), the value chain implementation will have a high risk of failing.

Then the fourth step should be Process Reengineering. There are a few common mistakes that make firms fail in performing re-engineering:

    • Limit the concept of process re-engineering to improve current activities (tactical level): Why do not you use re-engineering  to perform different activities? (Strategic level as Porter suggests.) We can use re-engineering at tactical level, strategic level or both. The strategic level should have higher organizational impact. Are you measuring how many of your reengineering initiatives belong to tactical and strategic level?
    • Lack strategic thinking on the value chain: Focusing too much in operational processes and neglecting the strategic activities. We should wonder ourselves: what are the key activities that our value proposition is requiring?
    • Fail to see the potential of outsourcing: Some people could be afraid of outsourcing because outsourcing could be interpreted as we are not able to improve those processes or activities internally. Indeed, it is very difficult to compete with specialized firms which offer outsourcing services. Therefore, it is a worthy solution to use outsourcing firms in order to leverage us on their Competitive Advantages. Outsourcing is a tool that can bring massive value to our firm (focus, expertise, reduce complexity, flexibility, savings, and cash-flow improvements.)
    • Reduce re-engineering tools to process mapping and the ISO norm: Modern re-engineering processes cannot be understood without using analytical and improving techniques like Lean and Six Sigma. Furthermore, other complementary management tools are needed like performance management, best practices, project management, or change management.
    • Substitute process knowledge for common sense: Inexperienced reengineering people are not likely able to detect problems, make a diagnostic, and fix the problem quickly. So, their job is based mainly on interviewing users and asking them for solutions. The value that they add is “using common sense” to the input received from the business users. Common sense is necessary, but it is not enough to generate a Competitive Advantage. Highly effective re-engineering required of a deep knowledge of the best class processes (supply chain process, sales process, etc.)
  • Reinventing the wheel in process re-engineering: There are a few well-developed process frameworks from prestigious organizations (APICS Supply Chain Council – SCC, American Productivity & Quality Center – APQC or Value Chain Group – VCG). However, there are people who do not follow any proven process framework. In those cases they are probably reengineering based on common sense what will take too much time, cost and the result would be poorly compared with competitors using those frameworks.
  • Assume that organizations need a specialized process re-engineering team to lead re-engineering rather than support it: I think that is more powerful having the owners of the processes leading and performing the re-engineering tasks. When the re-engineering come from users used to bring more powerful organizational changes and the reengineering is better embedded into the organization. Leading the re-engineering process from inside the areas (supply chain, customer relationship, human resources, etc.) is an indicator of the firm maturity and the quality on the staff. For this approach, organizations need a re-engineering team that train users and offer support rather than decide what must be changed.

Probably the best indicator that we have a solid business strategy and value chain execution is having the capability to replicate successfully strategies in different geographies (e.g. Zara/Inditex or McDonalds). Be aware that replication is quite difficult to achieve without robust and well defined processes.

Fifth step used to be ignoring for many organizations. Timeline is a key element to properly execute activities. Do you think is the same using 5 minutes for machines’ setup times than 5 hours? Do you think is the same unload trucks from 7:00 AM to 12:00 AM than allowing unload any time of the day? Obviously not, so process without timeline means processes not well defined. This will create coordination problems between different areas, friction between people performing sequential activities, problems measuring the important responsiveness KPIs, etc. Probably the most important issue to not defining timelines is that we would be unable to implement the “sense of urgency” in our organization. I mean urgency to satisfy customers’ needs, urgency to invoice customers on time, urgency to receive customers’ payments that improve our cash flow, and so on.

The next step is the sixth, Performance Management (Metrics). Nowadays, it is well known what it is a Key Performance Indicator (KPI). Nonetheless, many firms are not able to answer the following questions:

  • What are the strategic attributes of the company?
  • What are the overall health, diagnostic and root cause KPIs for any strategic attribute?
  • How many KPIs should we have?
  • What KPIs should we measure?

The answer of those questions is important in order to be sure that we have in place the correct KPIs to monitor our value chain. We should remember that “what it is not measured, it is not improved it.”

Once that we are able to define our KPIs, the next questions are:

  • Where is the information that we need?
  • How can we extract that information?
  • What are the dashboards or scorecards that we are using to present and communicate properly the KPIs?

Seventh step, Benchmarking: This management tool allows us to compare the performance of our main processes or activities with those of other comparable organizations (internal or external). So, this tool is allowing us to prioritize our value chain initiatives according to the higher gap between our current situation and the potential future state (higher potential benefits) and lower implementation risks.

Eighth step, Best Practices: As Michael Porter said: we could argue that the rapid diffusion of best practices means that competitor can quickly copy them. However, thinking in that way we would likely underestimate implementation diversity and complexity. Thus, we would not consider the competency to implement as source of Competitive Advantage. Why is implementation a source of Competitive Advantage? Because the implementation capability is very complex to imitate and used to make a huge difference between firms competing. For instance, if we ask a few chefs to cook a written recipe, with similar conditions (ingredients, oven, etc.), we will likely realize that the result of each chef can be reasonably similar but very different. Imagine the differences in results with the following circumstances that affect defining and executing the company’s value chain:

  • Activities: There are more than 1.000 activities (APQC) and like Porter mentioned trade-offs arise from activities themselves.
  • Best practices: There are hundreds of best practices, and trade-offs arise from best practices themselves too.
  • IT systems: Companies have different IT systems (Google, SAP, Oracle, Microsoft, etc.) with specific customizations what means that not all the best practices can be implemented in all the IT platforms or in the same way.
  • People: Each organization has different people with different mindsets and skills. So, the perceptions of which activities are an opportunity or which are risky rely on the teams of each particular firm.
  • Culture: Each organization has its specific culture. For instance regarding innovation we have innovators, early adopters, laggards, and so on.

Other advantage of using best practices is that push us to monitor the external environment in which we are following competitors. Additionally, best practices should help us to think out the box and to foster the creation of our own best practices list which could mean performing different activities than our rivals.

When we are talking about strategy execution, the variable people cannot be missed. Thus, the step ninth is Organizational Design where we assess any gap between the current inventory of our skills and the competencies level.

Finally, the step tenth Change Management considers a much broader implementation concept than just people issues. This is the last step for the value chain implementation, but it is not the less important. It is usual to find failed value chain initiatives where the design team is just blaming users because they did not implement properly. It is true that end users are responsible for delivering results too, although it is well known that there are many handicaps to make things happen. Thus, the design team is responsible for having a change management program, and a periodic follow-up that guarantees the success of all the initiatives.



  • Posted by: Javier González Montané

https://strategok.com/


пятница, 2 июня 2023 г.

Five Critical Areas Salespeople Need to Improve On

 There are many areas in the selling process that salespeople say they believe are not challenging, but that buyers say salespeople are not very effective at.

That's according to a report from RAIN Group, which was based on data from surveys of sellers and buyers.

An infographic (below) looks at findings from the research.

Specifically, it explores five areas where there's a significant gap between sellers' self-confidence and buyers' dissatisfaction: communicating value, bringing ideas, leading through needs discovery, negotiating deals, and making the ROI case.



https://www.marketingprofs.com/

среда, 17 мая 2023 г.

Governance ‘lines of sight’

 


To avoid oversights, directors need to ensure effective oversight.

How ironic is it that a key governance term can have opposite meanings depending on the context in which it is used? ‘Oversight‘ is one of the roles of board directors, meaning they oversee (monitor) the implementation of the strategy they developed, along with the organisation’s performance and conformance. When things go wrong however, a common reason is that there was an ‘oversight’; something important wasn’t noticed by a responsible person or persons.

Oversight is one of the four ‘lines of sight’ commonly mentioned when discussing the roles of the board, with hindsightforesight and insight completing the quartet. A ‘Backgrounder’ published by the Ontario Institute on Governance (NFP Governance Leadership: Creating a Culture of Accessibility) features valuable material on these lines of sight, and pages 8-12 are recommended reading for all directors (and managers).

The chart below is an adaptation of one devised by Soumitra Bandyopadhyay, which was his take on the ‘analytics continuum’, or maturity model, popularised by Gartner.


My additions allocate the four lines of sight to the analytic modes, methods and activities, while also overlaying the board roles according to the EDM governance model (Evaluate, Direct and Monitor).

Not-for-profit directors new to the role can sometimes assume that their agenda pack contains everything they need to do their job. By referring to these more subtle models, they may discover there are other questions they should be asking, and that additional analysis may be required for the board to add value for the organisation.

https://cutt.ly/86LFfGC

вторник, 16 мая 2023 г.

Digital Marketing Models: The Honeycomb model

 

Use the honeycomb model to help inform your social media strategy

Back in 2011, a group of professors from Canada; Jan Kietzmann, Kristopher Hermkens and Ian McCarthy created the Honeycomb Model to review social media effectiveness, looking at reasons why users engage with social media.

The idea behind the honeycomb model is that of the 7 key building blocks delineated by the model, companies can select the ones most relevant to their business, and focus their attention on the key functionalities.


We created this simple table to help you evaluate each of the seven blocks, so you can decide which ones, and how many, your organization should focus on.

Social media building blocks:

Identity: Data privacy controls and tools for user self-promotion
Presence: Creating and managing the reality, intimacy and immediacy of the context
Relationships: Managing the structural and flow properties in a network of relationships
Reputation: Monitoring the strength, passion, sentiment, and reach of users and brands
Groups: Membership rules and protocols
Conversations: Conversation velocity, and the risks of staring and joining
Sharing: Content management system and social graph

Step-by-step digital marketing planning for you

Looking for new strategies and tactics to plan your always-on and campaign social media marketing? Get started today with our acclaimed marketing structure, the RACE Framework. A popular planning model for large and small teams, and individuals, RACE walks you through your customers' experiences of all your marketing channels, integrated across reach, act, convert, and engage.


Structure your marketing plan around a funnel proven to boost performance. Join Smart Insights as a Free Member for instant access to our free digital marketing plan template to hone your skills and drive the results you need.

Social media marketing model

In summary, the Honeycomb model is a great framework for considering social media networks but it is not a decision tree and therefore the final decision as to ‘which network should we select?’, still, needs to be taken within the organization.

By Annmarie Hanlon

https://cutt.ly/n6FucRQ

воскресенье, 30 апреля 2023 г.

The Most Hated Brand in Countries Around the World

 What brand do people complain about most in different countries around the world?

To find out, Merchant Machine evaluated tweets containing brand names for positive or negative tones using an AI sentiment analysis tool.

The researchers then determined the most hated brand for many countries based on the highest proportion of negative tweets.

An infographic (below) presents the findings of the analysis.


https://cutt.ly/R5GNMSJ

вторник, 25 апреля 2023 г.

Global EV Production: BYD Surpasses Tesla

 


2022 was another historic year for EVs, with annual production surpassing 10 million cars for the first time ever. This represents a sizeable bump up from 2021’s figure of 6.7 million.

In this infographic, we’ve used data from EV Volumes to visualize the top 15 brands by output. The color of each brand’s bubble represents their growth from 2021, with the darker shades depicting a larger percentage increase.

BYD Auto

BYD Auto has leaped past Tesla to become the new EV king, boosting its output by a massive 211% in 2022. Given this trajectory, the company will likely become the world’s first automaker to produce over 2 million EVs in a single year.

BYD has a limited presence in non-domestic markets, but this could change rather quickly. The company is planning a major push into Europe, where it expects to build factories in order to avoid EU tariffs on Chinese car imports.

The company is also building a factory in Thailand, to produce right-hand drive models for markets like Australia, New Zealand, and the UK.

Tesla

#Tesla increased its output by a respectable 40% in 2022, staying ahead of Western brands like Volkswagen (+10%) and GM (+13%), but falling behind its Chinese rivals such as Geely (+251%).

Whether these Chinese brands can maintain their triple digit growth figures is uncertain, but one thing is clear: Tesla is facing more competition than ever before.

The company is targeting annual production of 20 million cars by 2030, meaning it will need to keep yearly growth rates in the high double digits for the rest of the decade. To support this initiative, Tesla is planning a multi-billion dollar factory in Mexico capable of producing 1 million cars a year.

Hyundai

Hyundai Motor Company, which also owns Kia, posted a similar growth rate to Tesla. The South Korean automaker was a relatively early player in the EV space, revealing the first Hyundai Ioniq in 2016.

In late 2022, several countries including South Korea expressed their disapproval of the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, which withdrew tax credits on EVs not produced within the United States.

Hyundai is currently building a $5.5 billion EV factory in the state of Georgia, but this facility will not become operational until 2025. In the meantime, South Korea has revised its own EV subsidy program to favor domestic brands.

https://lnkd.in/gi9yjaeK

пятница, 14 апреля 2023 г.

24 Do's and Don'ts of Social Media

 What are the basic rules you should follow when developing your social media content and social media strategy?

To help marketers and business owners succeed, social media guru Angie Gensler created an infographic (below) that covers 24 essential do's and don'ts.

It looks at some key approaches that you should definitely take, such as varying your post types and narrowing your focus.

The infographic also delves into approaches not to take, such as focusing on vanity metrics and being overly promotional.


https://cutt.ly/C7LIaYf

понедельник, 27 марта 2023 г.

A Guide to Growth Hacking for Small Businesses

 Growth hacking sounds great in theory for a small business. But what does it actually mean and how can it help you scale efficiently?

An infographic (below) from OnDeck provides a guide to getting started with growth hacking.

It starts by looking at what the term means and its history.

Next, the infographic explores seven growth-hacking strategies that have been proven to work for small businesses.


https://cutt.ly/Q4H9hbW

пятница, 24 февраля 2023 г.

2023 essential digital marketing tools

 As marketers today, we’re fortunate to have a huge number of free and low-cost digital marketing tools to give us insight into our customers, competitors, and markets.

These strategic digital tools help us to compete to win and retain customers by delivering automated relevant, real-time marketing communications, integrated across digital devices and traditional marketing channels.

To help highlight the range of great options available, our updated 2023 essential digital marketing tools infographic recommends 30 categories of marketing technology and our pick of the most popular 5 in each category.

Plus, we’ve grouped them across our RACE Growth System for managing digital marketing, so you can review where you could make better use of the tools across the customer lifecycle. Click on the infographic below to see a larger version or download our guide on Essential Digital Marketing tools available to free members to learn more about how and why we created it and how to use it.


What inspired us to create this infographic and guide for digital marketing tools?

We use many types of digital marketing services and insights tools to run and improve SmartInsights.com and because of this, we love to try out new tools when they are suggested to us.

We were inspired by Scott Brinker’s Marketing Technology landscape which does an excellent job of defining different types of ‘enterprise’ tools for managing digital marketing, but can be difficult to read because of the sheer number of tools. There are nearly 10,000 is the latest edition...!


Also, we wanted to include more low-cost and free ‘hands-on’ insight tools which are important for managing activities like search, social media, and conversion rate optimization. These don’t tend to be included on Scott’s landscape.

We also wanted to highlight the most popular, well-regarded services, and give an indication of how they can be used to add value. Business Pro Members can also read our full recommendations in our updated marketing technology selection guide.

How to prioritize marketing insight and management tools?

If you were doubting the number of tools available, just look at the growth in the number of marketing technology applications over the last few years.

To further complicate the landscape, we've recently seen new challenger tools doing a better job than established tools, due to their innovative nature.

The sheer number of tools, which vary enormously in cost and quality, means it's a challenge to keep on top of the latest developments in MarTech. It can be hard to select and manage digital marketing tools, and track their contribution to your marketing results.

To help, our infographic breaks down these essential digital marketing tools into different categories of use and shows you which products you should be considering for different marketing activities across our RACE Growth System.

Optimize your digital marketing strategy

If you're interested in learning more about the differences between individual tools, and how they can help your business then you'll want to download our marketing technology selection guide, for Business Pro Members. Our popular guide contains reviews and information on key features for all of the tools on the infographic, that's 150 tools in total!

Plus, if you're looking to inform and optimize your digital marketing with the latest data-driven techniques, don't miss our RACE Growth System free template to quickly build your RACE digital marketing strategy and improve your performance.

By Dave Chaffey

https://cutt.ly/n8uWYil

четверг, 23 февраля 2023 г.

Event Marketing in 2023: Trends and Challenges

 Most marketers who organize and run events expect event marketing budgets to increase this year, according to recent research from Splash.

The report was based on data from a survey conducted in November 2022 among 670 event professionals in the United States and Europe.

Some 73% of respondents say they expect event marketing budgets to increase in 2023.


Event marketers say the biggest key to event success in 2023 is attracting the right attendees (32% cite).

Some 43% of event professionals say they expect to run a mix of in-person and virtual events this year and 30% expect to run only in-person events.


Event marketers say their biggest challenges are not enough team members (26% cite as a big issue) and not enough budget (23%).



About the research: The report was based on data from a survey conducted in November 2022 among 670 event professionals in the United States and Europe.