Module9 Business Planning 0 PDF
Module9 Business Planning 0 PDF
Module9 Business Planning 0 PDF
BUSINESS PLANNING
PART OF A MODULAR TRAINING RESOURCE
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BUSINESS PLANNING
INTRODUCTION
This Module will provide a range of tools to assist you to develop a comprehensive
strategic plan for your business. It will help you ‘pull together’ all of the thinking and
information gained from other components of this Package.
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The key elements of the Strategy and Business Planning Cycle are discussed over the
following pages.
The Board and management are responsible for leading a review of the organisation’s
current position, its alternative futures and its ‘preferred future’. The constituted
objectives of your organisation will frame your thinking; however, this is an opportunity to
consider if your organisation needs to adjust its purpose.
Work undertaken in the areas described in the Introductory Module and in Modules 1 to
8 will be useful here. The Introductory Module to Module 5 focus on a review of the
current position of the organisation (Where are you now?), and Modules 6 to 8 focus on
opportunities for the future (Where do you want to go?).
This material can be collated to inform the Board and management’s considerations and
can provide the necessary information to formulate your organisation’s strategic plan. As
an overall comment, the employment services industry has a number of barriers to entry
that will require organisational strategies to overcome.
At the same time, consideration of impacts from the external environment and internal
environment on your organisation need to be considered.
EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
The Tools and Tips section of this Module provides two tools for assessing the external
environment, on pages 8 and 11. Also consider any work undertaken in the areas
described in Module 6 (Exploring business opportunities) and Module 7 (Partnering for
business growth).
INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
Page 14 in the Tools and Tips section of this Module provides a tool for assessing the
internal environment. Consider this together with any work undertaken in the areas
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described in Module 3 (Redeployment of staff) and Module 10 (Managing change and
communication).
Discuss the possible pathways for your organisation. This demands both imagination
and effort.1
Management will prepare the majority of input into stages 2, 3 and 4 of the Strategy and
Business Planning Cycle (see page 2). These inputs include analysis of the
organisation’s current position (internal analysis); an audit of the organisation’s external
and industry environment, including its competitors; discussion papers on different
scenarios for the industry’s future; and discussion papers on alternative strategies that
could be followed.
The diagram on the following page articulates these inputs and analysis and how you
can also use a SWOT analysis to gather together the information. At the conclusion of
this Module, a range of tools are provided to assist with this analysis.
1 CB Carter and JW Lorsch, Back to the Drawing Board: Designing Corporate Boards for a Complex World, Harvard
Business School Publishing, Boston, 2004, page 159.
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Global Environment Task Environment
Internal Analysis
Analysis analysis
Opportunities/Threats Strengths/Weakness
S.W.O.T.
A SWOT analysis can be used to identify and classify key strategic factors. The term
SWOT is simply an acronym for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats.
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The purpose of a SWOT analysis is to:
This is a good tool to bring together the external and internal analysis undertaken above.
If you use the SWOT analysis as your core tool to pull together your analysis, it is
important that each item is clearly defined and understood by all individuals involved in
the process. It is important to prioritise each item. When undertaking the next steps:
Give priority to opportunities and threats that have the highest potential impact on the
business and have the highest probability of occurring.
The following table demonstrates the framework which you could use to
consolidate/present the priority strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats for your
organisation.
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PATHWAY SELECTION
Discussion and selection of these strategic alternatives often takes place in a ‘strategy
workshop’ with management and directors. This process will vary based on the size and
the magnitude of change your organisation is dealing with. It might be this whole cycle
happens within a few weeks for an organisation facing 100 per cent change in business,
or over three to four months for an organisation that might have suffered a minor
business adjustment.
After the strategic workshop prepare a brief three to four page document that
encapsulates the outcomes and can act as a platform for writing a more detailed
strategic plan (or, if you need to make quick decisions, this document may become your
plan).
Here are some suggested topics that can be addressed in this type of document:
Longer term organisational goals (qualitative and quantitative), possibly in the form of
vision, mission and values and key targets (financial and non-financial) for the whole
business and each service line.
Five or six key issues from the external and internal environment assessment. These
are your major issues that must be addressed for ongoing success and in order to
achieve your organisation’s goals.
This step includes the development of a detailed strategic plan for Board ratification.
Make sure the key performance indicators (KPIs) developed are measurable and have
time frames attached to them.
EXAMPLE
STRATEGY
KPIs
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Generate a break-even position in 2012–13
This strategic plan is then translated into the annual business plan and budget.
IMPLEMENTATION
MONITORING
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TOOLS AND TIPS – EXTERNAL ANALYSIS (PESTLE)
PESTLE analysis stands for ‘Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal and
Environmental analysis’ and describes a framework of macro-environmental factors used
in the study and interpretation of those events and trends which influence a business, an
industry or even a total market.
Factor Description
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Factor Description
Legal Legal factors include discrimination law, consumer law, antitrust law,
employment law, and health and safety law. These factors can affect
how a business operates, its costs, and the demand for its products.
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TEMPLATE – PESTLE ANALYSIS
Factor Considerations
Political
Economic
Social
Technological
Legal
Environmental
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INDUSTRY ANALYSIS – PORTER’S FIVE FORCES
Another way to consider the strategic implications of your industry and environment is to
use the Porter’s Five Forces Analysis2.
This model analyses the nature and intensity of industry competition in terms of five
major forces and determines the level of attractiveness in exploring an industry.
Factors which influence the threat of new entrants include: the ability to tender,
experience in the industry (track record), financial capabilities in relation to set up
costs, ability to service job seekers and employers, brand and economies of scale.
Factors which influence the power of suppliers include: services for job seekers
(registered training organisations and other services to assist), supply of job seekers
and vacant positions.
Factors which influence the degree of industry competition include: growth in the
sector and maturing of the market, concentration of Providers in particular
metropolitan geographies and the ‘star ratings’ system.
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Factors which influence the threat of substitutes include: numerous providers
particularly in metropolitan geographies, quality of service you provide and lack of
cost to job seeker if they choose to change provider.
A template that you can use to undertake an industry analysis using Porter’s Five Forces
is provided overleaf.
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TEMPLATE – PORTER’S FIVE FORCES
Force Considerations
New entrants (How easy is it for new entrants to enter the market?)
Buyers (Who funds the services and what are their requirements?)
Substitutes (Are there other organisations / services that can meet industry
requirements?)
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ASSESSING YOUR INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
Competent people and capable organisations are more likely to be able to deal
effectively with the turbulent environment in which they operate. A solid understanding of
existing organisational capabilities and a clearly articulated strategic intent that defines
the organisation and its market can assist you to understand your existing internal
environment.
The question is: ‘What is it that your organisation does well? What are its strengths?’
Prahalad and Hamel3 identified three ‘tests’ that help determine if something is a ‘core’
capability for the organisation or a ‘core’ competency for an individual. These are:
Relevance: A core capability must give your customers something that strongly
influences them to choose your product or service. If it does not, then it has no effect
on your competitive position and is not a core capability.
Difficulty of imitation: A core capability should be difficult to imitate. This allows you to
provide products or services that are better than those of your competitors. If you are
continually working to improve these, it means that you can sustain your competitive
position.
3
CK Prahalad and G Hamel, ‘The Core Competence of the Corporation’, Harvard Business Review, vol. 68, no. 3, 1990,
pp. 79-91.
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STRATEGIC PLAN FORMAT
Discussion of performance
Industry analysis
Competitor analysis
Summary of the major issues that must be addressed for future success
Summary of the proposed corporate and business level strategies including goals
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ACTION PLANS
QUANTIFIED PLANS
General operational and financial plans (major events – one to three or more years)4
4
G.Hubbard., Strategic Management: Thinking, Analysis & Action. Sydney: Pearson Education (2004)
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