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Making a Difference: From Strategic Plan to Business Plan

Making a Difference: From Strategic Plan to Business Plan. Presenters: Susan Bailey and Chris Palazzolo Additional Contributors: Eric Bymaster and Charles Forrest 2008 Library Assessment Conference Seattle, WA August 6, 2008. What the POP represents.

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Making a Difference: From Strategic Plan to Business Plan

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  1. Making a Difference: From Strategic Plan to Business Plan Presenters: Susan Bailey and Chris Palazzolo Additional Contributors: Eric Bymaster and Charles Forrest 2008 Library Assessment Conference Seattle, WA August 6, 2008

  2. What the POP represents • Performance reporting to Unit Action Plan • Change request process to update action plan • Place to raise issues that are cross-cutting and cannot be resolved by a single unit • Continued engagement with Business Plan Workbook, which takes the planner through a variety of questions about mission, customers, resources prior to action plan development • Public document of progress to organization, presented at open forum meeting, some units reporting each month

  3. Example: Reporting Meeting Agenda 9:30am – 12:00pm • 9:30-9:40 Opening Remarks • 9:40-10:00 U130 Organizational Development – Smith • 10:00-10:20 U140 Financial Management – Bymaster • 10:20-10:40 SI310 Branch – Meyer • 10:40-10:50 Break • 10:50-11:10 SI220 Distinctive Research Collections – Enniss • 11:10-11:30 SI210 Signature MARBL Library – Enniss • 11:30-11:45 Summary & Clarify Issues • 11:45-12:00 Review Prior Pending Issues, Change Requests, & Closing Comments

  4. What happens in the reporting meeting • Visuals may include the original or rolled up action plan • POPs are available in hard copy for meeting attendees • Presenters usually use the POP as the reporting outline • Additional visuals for metrics are now being incorporated

  5. What happens in the reporting meeting • As a presenter, I have 10 minutes to present my report • When I conclude, there is a 10 minute Q&A period, with Vice Provost and Director of Libraries as the first questioner • If there are cross-cutting issues identified through my report, they are recorded by the meeting facilitator and are reviewed for tracking at the end of the meeting

  6. What happens in the reporting meeting • After all reports are delivered, facilitator wraps up by reviewing and getting clarification for issues that have been identified from the meeting • An issue owner is identified—that creates an open issue which will be tracked and reported on • Core Team member reviews the open issues list to see if any have been closed and if there is activity to bring the various open issues to closure

  7. Keys to the Emory Approach • Creation of a business plan for each strategic and operational unit • Performance reporting and tracking process • Assignment of process roles and responsibilities

  8. How did we get here? • New Vice Provost and Director of Libraries in August 2006 • Revised strategic plan in late 2006 • How to keep the plan alive in the organization? • How to align strategic planning and operational planning? • Taking the strategic plan narrative and breaking it into pieces enabled its translation into business plans—strategic plans are typically narrative, wish state. • Business planning process developed to build in the mechanisms for keeping the plan alive and creating accountability and transparency of process

  9. Process Roles and Responsibilities • Core Team members (4-5 members of the library staff, currently from HR, Budget and Finance, Collection Management, Assessment) • Work with external consultant on planning and implementation • Develop documentation, work with plan developers, review and advise on plans • Schedule and plan reporting meetings • Maintain open issues and change management process • External consultant, Jude Heimel http://www.judeheimel.com/

  10. Challenges • Lack of experience in business planning, project management, process knowledge, metrics development • Lack of experience among leaders in creating succinct, clear updates as measured against an existing plan • Adapting to disciplined approach • Publicly acknowledging and discussing issues • Clarity of ownership and decision making

  11. Evolution of the Process FY08 FY09 Completed Business Plan Workbook, enhanced with new tools: High Level Block Diagram (process map) Customer Segmentation Matrix Metrics Created Action Plan to plan the year’s work and measure progress Will conduct FY08 Wrap-Up and FY09 Plan Showcase sessions • Completed Business Plan Workbook • Created Action Plan to plan the year’s work and measure progress

  12. Business Plan Structure of Business Plan FY09 Additions High-Level Block Diagram (Process Map) Customer Matrix Metrics (Identification and Elaboration) • Purpose, Product/Service and Customers • Staffing Structure, Competencies and Work Flow • Action Plan • Collaborating with Strategic Initiatives and Operational Units • Financial and Resource Needs

  13. Business Plan Components Action Plan Customer Matrix Identify/segment customers, their needs, motivations, quantity, distinguishing characteristics, etc. Meant to be a means to ensure that unit/initiative is providing the products/services needed/desired • Plan establishes objectives, tasks and milestones; progress reported on via POP • FY09 additions • Cluster meetings among related groups to discuss linkages and relationships (process, personnel, resources, etc.)

  14. Business Plan Components Process Map Metrics Measure progress on certain objectives, tasks, milestones, performance, etc. Metrics summary sheet (define metric, frequency of collection, responsible parties, etc.) • Provides high-level understanding of the principal activity or activities in which the unit/initiative is involved • Demonstrates handoffs, linkages, etc. among different groups (formal/informal, operationalized/ad hoc, etc.)

  15. Business Plan Purposes • Review organizational progress and provide a context for accountability • Build greater understanding within the whole organization of our direction, progress and issues needing resolution over time • Facilitate decision-making and shift our focus to outcomes

  16. Framework of organizational business basics enables us to better: • Manage customer feedback • Continuously improve customer satisfaction levels • Continuously improve performance of critical processes • Continuously develop staff skills and knowledge • Optimize utilization of organizational resources • Meet and/or exceed sponsorship requirements • Effectively manage fiscal budgets

  17. Strategic Business Management - Data Flow Performance Reports Business Research Business Sponsorship Performance Assessment Data Analysis Business Environment DBR’s Business Charter Performance Review Performance Issues Sponsor Goals & Objectives New Technologies Constancy of Purpose Business Planning Performance Measurement Business Technology Mission Vision Products/Services Strategic Business Plan Operational “ Plan Customer Feedback Process Metrics Supplier Processes Business Processes Customer Processes Plan Deployment

  18. And How are we Doing? • Who are the customers of our process? • How well are we doing? • How far do we have to go? • Next steps

  19. Conclusion We are making progress, but we aren’t yet there—it will require consistency and patience! • “There must be consistency in direction.” • “It does not happen all at once. There is no instant pudding.” • W. Edwards Deming

  20. Questions? • For copies of documents or forms, feel free to contact: • Susan Bailey libsbb@emory.edu

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