Companies that have the power to implement are able to meet their customers’ needs more successfully than the competition – or provide them with what they need at lower cost. To be better, all of an organization’s strengths must work together, specifically targeting the right strategic objectives. Often, this requires the entire company to undergo transformation.
Being better means being ahead of the competition in selected areas – and not just pulling level or even settling for less good performance. There are many areas in which organizations can be better, including quality, trustworthiness, flexibility, service, reliability, professionalism, likeability, and credibility. Given that it is not possible to be ahead of the competition in all competition-relevant areas, the selection of specific areas in which to be better takes on strategic importance, to avoid the risk of companies spreading themselves too thin and having an unclear profile.
Companies that are able to make plans reality
align the interplay of all internal strengths
towards achieving specific strategic objectives.
OPTIMIZING EVERYDAY ROUTINES
It is important to know that being better is not a quick and easy task. Being better requires everyone in the company to pull together. Where being distinct requires brilliant decisions by motivating visionaries, being better is about many forces working together.
Being able to align the interplay of all internal forces towards achieving specific strategic objectives is the purest embodiment of power to implement . It crystallizes over the course of infinite individual actions in everyday working life. Typically, companies become better when many people are involved in the process and when improvements are anchored in daily routines. For this reason, management instruments such as organizational design, strategic objectives, planning, budgeting, reporting, remuneration systems, teambuilding, and communication all support companies in developing their power to implement.
THE HYBRID MODEL OF THE POWER TO IMPLEMENT
But how can companies systematically become better than their competitors, and stay better than them? Various aspects need to be taken into account when it comes to establishing the power to implement. The linchpin is the strategic target system, because clear objectives and actions mean that the power to implement is directed in a manner that all energies in the company can be focused on. Two parallel spheres drive the process of becoming better on this basis: Configuration and collaboration.
Configuration consists of the company’s structural alignment. This includes how the organizational structure is designed, the consistent cascading of objectives and tasks (alignment) and the distribution of resources (planning). Collaboration, on the other hand, optimizes personal behavior in the company. This includes ensuring that managers act as role models and that employees are willing to approach their work energetically, as well as interaction in the context of analysis and evaluation of results.
Both spheres play a crucial role with respect to the power to implement. They focus the company’s strengths and avoid companies spreading their abilities too thin. Without the correct configurations in place, roles and responsibilities remain unclear, actions are not coherently coordinated, and resources are incorrectly allocated. But without positive collaboration, becoming better is doomed to failure. If managers are not united, or if they do not act as effective role models, or if employees are not prepared to contribute to success, or if there is insufficient dialog as to whether and how goals will be achieved, companies cannot be better than the competition.
Only companies that are continually becoming better can maintain success on the market. To prevent this becoming a platitude, strategies must be aimed at ensuring that energy and resources are steered, in every case, to areas in which improvements yield significantly positive effects on the market – even if this requires the company to undergo a fundamental transformation.
Further information is available at www.horvath-partners.com/WP-OSM
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Dr. Tim Wolf