Developing The Vision, Mission and Plan For Change Dr.G.Sudhakar
Developing The Vision, Mission and Plan For Change Dr.G.Sudhakar
DR.G.SUDHAKAR
4.1. INTRODUCTION
For a successful change management, developing a clear vision and roadmap and
keeping the people in the organization aware of the organization’s purpose are
essential. Defining a vision helps the people to understand the organization’s
ultimate goal and guide them to the desirable direction. Thus, it is very important
to develop an effective vision for the first step of the change management.
The basic approach for setting the vision and roadmap is to create statements that
describe an organization’s goal. In this context the ‘Mission Statement’, ‘Vision
Statement’, and ‘Value Statement’ in organizations are important and essential.
4.2. MISSION STATEMENT
A mission statement is a written declaration that tells who the organization is,
what it does, and how it will get there. It serves to attach meaning to an
organization's operations beyond profit and loss statements by:
1) filtering what is important from what is not;
2) identifying which markets will be served and how;
3) communicating a sense of intended direction of where an organisation is headed,
how it plans to get there; and
4) what are its priorities, values, and beliefs, and how it is distinctive.
This statement often addresses a wide-ranging audience that includes management,
employees, customers, shareholders, and other residents of the communities and
countries where a company does business. A good mission statement is based on a
good understanding of organization’s role, and articulates the objective in
convincing manner using proactive verbs. Here are some examples of real-world
companies’ Mission Statements:
“To give ordinary folk the chance to buy the same thing as rich people.” (Wal-
Mart)
“To make people happy.” (Walt Disney)
“To push the leading edge of aviation, taking huge challenges doing what others
cannot do” (Boeing)
“To organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and
useful.”(Google)
“To provide society with superior products and services by developing innovations
and solutions that improve the quality of life and satisfy customer needs, and to
provide employees with meaningful work and advancement opportunities, and
investors with a superior rate of return.” (Merck)
Normally, a Mission Statement represents the broadest perspective of an
organization's mission. A Mission Statement can be also very specific. The former
are like above instances, but the later specifically defines the key measures of the
organization’s success. Sometimes it uses specific numbers.
SIGNIFICANCE OF MISSION STATEMENT
An effective mission statement resonates with the people working in and for the
organization by expressing the purpose in a manner that inspires commitment and
innovation. It communicates the importance of an organization's internal activities
and the overarching reasons why employees should value their work there.
Furthermore, it allows the organization to keep employees focused and it forms a
basis for making tactical decisions. Beneficial decisions to the organization can
include preserving or strengthening the company's unique competitive niche, and
preventing panic and unwise spending responses to meet new competitors that
enter the market. Externally, publishing an effective mission statement provides a
sense of stability and security as stakeholders can understand what to expect from
the organization. The overall effectiveness of a mission statement hinges on being
adopted by the organization, its employees, and stakeholders.
Effective mission statements usually feature four main characteristics:
1) simple, declarative statements free of jargon,
2) honest and realistic,
3) communicates expectations and ethics, and
4) periodically updated
An ineffective mission statement is usually not remembered by people inside and
outside the organization rendering them useless. Often statements are jargon-heavy
and contain vague generalizations that could apply to almost any company. The
paragraphs themselves are too long which make it difficult to be recalled by
anyone. An unclear mission statement leads to a loss in shared focus. More often
than not, individual missions tend to rise up and compete with each other which
results in conflicts, delays, and lost revenues. Another factor that often results in
mission statements becoming ineffective is when vision and mission statements are
intermixed which cloud their practicality. Rather than having a mission statement
that addresses what an organization has to do to achieve their goals, the statement
focuses on where the organization sees itself and wants to go in the future. Lastly,
a mission statement loses its effectiveness when an organization places far greater
weight to the mission statement's public relations function than to its value as a
management tool to help the business overcome obstacles and challenges.
HOW TO IMPLEMENT IT
A well-crafted mission statement alone will not bring about change in an
organization. Implementation is the essential factor that enables change to be made
possible. Everything in the practice must be based upon and measured against the
mission statement. A five part framework that highlights how to develop and put
mission statements into practice:
1. Orientation Process
The purpose of the orientation process is to ensure that individuals in the
organization are aware of their significance and role in planning. The goal is to
render differences in opinion, which is a vital part of achieving an appropriate
mission statement. Understanding the significance of the mission statement to
strategic management and an introduction into the development process used to
design an effective mission statement for their organization is vital to achieving an
appropriate mission statement for a firm.
2. Component Analysis
Once an understanding of the importance of a mission statement to the
organization has been established, the firm must identify components to be
addressed in the statement.
Below is a guideline of components that firms may seek to address in their mission
statement:
1). Customers: Who are the enterprise’s present and future customers?
2). Products or services: What are the firm’s major products or services?
3). Markets: Where does the firm compete?
4). Technology: What is the firm’s basic technology?
5). Concern for survival, growth, and profitability: What is the firm’s attitude
towards economic goals?
6). Philosophy: What are the basic beliefs, values, aspirations, and philosophical
priorities of the firm?
7). Self-concepts: What are the firms’ major strengths and competitive
advantages?
8). Concern for public image: What is the firm’s public image?
3. Communication Analysis
Deciding how and to whom the mission statement should be communicated is
critical.
First, organizations must determine if the statement is written in a clear and
concise manner. Readability by the target audience is important. Mission
statements must avoid the over usage of buzz words and jargon to ensure that the
mission can be easily articulated and remembered.
Second, the organization must evaluate the mission statement using words that
describe the feelings of inspiration and motivation management wants to convey.
Mission statements are most effective when it can arouse emotions for an
organization. A good mission statement makes people feel that an organization is
successful, knows where it is going, and is worthy of the reader’s time, support,
and investment.
4. Applicability Analysis
The purpose of the applicability analysis is to measure how effective or ineffective
mission statements are in dealing with a given organizational issues. By creating
various test scenarios leaders can assess how well managers understand the
direction provided through the statement as well as their ability to apply the
mission statement to the situation. The results of the analysis enable management
to refine the mission statement until it can be easily understood and adhered to.
5. Putting mission statements into practice
For a great mission statement to go beyond being words on a paper, it requires the
commitment of both employees and leaders of the organization. It is crucial to
allow employees from all levels of the organization to contribute to development
of the mission to create a sense of ownership. An example could include helping
identify the strengths and limitations of the organization during the initial stages of
creating a mission statement. Leaders must take the initiative to educate employees
with regards to contents of the mission statement and what it means for the
organization as a whole. They must communicate using language that is clear and
resonates with employees. Leaders function as role models in the organization and
must ensure their actions align with the mission of the organization to set
precedents for employees.
STEPS FOR DEVELOPING MISSION STATEMENT
1. Identify your organization’s “winning idea”. This is the idea or approach that
will make your organization stand out from its competitors, and it is the reason
why customers will come to you and not your competitors.
2. Identify the key measures of your success. Make sure to choose the most
important measures.
3. Combine your winning idea and success measures into a tangible and
measurable goal.
4. Refine the words until you have a concise and precise statement of your mission,
which expresses your ideas, measures, and desired results.
4.3. VISION STATEMENT
Vision statement is overall goal and value of an organization. It concentrates on the
future of the organization itself. This definition sounds very similar to the
definition of a mission statement. However, existing differences between these two
statements is that a vision statement is about what an organization wants to
become, while a mission statement concerns what an organization is all about.
Though a vision statement does not tell you how you are going to get there, it does
set the direction for your business planning.
“For employees, it gives direction about how they are expected to behave and
inspires them to give their best. Shared with customers, it shapes customers’
understanding of why they should work with the organization”.
A vision statement also has an intrinsic definition which is a concept “to unify a
group around a task”. A unified group has much more potential power to beat their
competitors than normal groups and a vision statement can help a group to be a
unified group.
Advantages
1. Cost effective
2. Efficiently communicates routine change
3. Allows organization to reach a large audience quickly and consistently
Disadvantages
1. Impersonal
2. Employees may not read mass communication
3. Does not easily facilitate an environment in which recipients can ask questions
or supply feedback
Advantages
1. Enables leaders to reinforce importance of the change initiative
2. Allows employees to ask immediate questions and provide feedback
3. Enables employees to receive information from leaders, whom they are more
likely to trust
Disadvantages
1. Time consuming
2. Ineffective for reaching employees in dispersed workforces
3. Executives’ presence may discourage employees from openly voicing concerns
4. Inappropriately timed and too detailed information can cause confusion.