Hi Meet Meegan & Magate Wildhorse Ltd

Getting a Grip on Performance: The Full Scoop

Join us for a “fly on the wall” journey into the struggles and emotions of O’Neil as he tries to understand the strategy and results of the organization that he leads as CEO.
Eavesdrop on the forty-something-year-old executive at the office after dark; and later, on his date with E, when she shares tips on how he could use an organizational self-assessment for helping him to get a grip on performance.

This and other audio stories on “Stories We Have Lived” are suitable for organizational leaders, managers, students of business, strategy, and performance. Caribbean flavoured with just enough spice for global appetites.

Narrator/Actors: Michael Myles and Meegan Scott
Music: From “Dreaming of a New Jamaica” by Stanley Beckford and the Startlights
Copyright © 2018 Magate Wildhorse, Meegan Scott. All Rights Reserved.

audio story organizational self-assessment  strategy implementation, program evaluation remote performance evaluation performance management corporate strategy competitive advantage

Time to Get Help with Program Management

Image

help with project management help with program management remote project management

Share your pain point! Click the contact us link today!

Monitoring the Execution of Strategic Plans – From the IAF Interview

formagatepurpose

Magate Wildhorse and I thank the Association for Strategic Planning, and the International Affairs Forum (IAF) for the opportunity to speak on the topic of Monitoring Strategic Plans ahead of the ASP Conference 2018. This year’s conference theme: “Bridging the Strategy Execution Gap”.

Below Meegan Scott shares with Dimitri Neos of the International Affairs Forum on the Magate Wildhorse approach to monitoring the implementation of strategic plans.  The pre-conference interview addresses the monitoring process for driving strategy execution.

Our approach to pre-implementation evaluation of strategic plans was shared in the previous post. And our post-implementation, plan evaluation approach will be shared in the post following this.

IA-Forum: What is your approach to Monitoring and Evaluation strategic plans?

The monitoring which happens pretty soon after planning as we progress along the strategy process supports evaluation and is part of the control function. Again, the approach that we’ll take depends on our role in the processes. Our work will focus largely on monitoring for results versus merely tracking implementation status.We tend to use a blended approach where we focus on utilization and empowerment of the client. We are proactive about our emphasis on learning from the monitoring and performance measurement process. The aim is to get the best in terms of correcting actions to avoid disaster, and also for learning and improvement—which helps with risk management and mitigation.

Those are the approaches and now let’s discuss the steps.

The first step would be to conduct a monitoring readiness assessment to decide why and what to monitor.
If we led the planning, the monitoring readiness assessment would not be an exhaustive process because we would have done that in the prior organizational assessment. In that case it would be more about knowing how ready the client is to take on the challenge, preparing them to use monitoring and reporting tools as well as tracking and reporting tools.

The next thing that we would focus on, is identifying the best tools for them. For that we consider the type, the level, and the quality of the monitoring and reporting experience of the organization.

We play the role of evangelist for performance management and measurement. That helps us, as well as the organization, and it makes planning easier. We ensure everyone understands the role of monitoring and evaluation, and its importance in demonstrating and ensuring accountability. We highlight its importance in providing data for getting stakeholder buy-in and ensuring relevance, as well as to validating and making a judgment about the effectiveness of their programs. It is always interesting when a group walks up and says, “we do well because we did this and that”. But when you begin to speak with founders, management, funders, and staff, they understand that what they were taking for doing well is a different story. Or maybe what they were beating themselves up for was not all that bad.

We also emphasize the importance of monitoring for providing information that may lead to winning more funding, getting messages for marketing, and for driving innovation. There’s also the possibility of using the monitoring process to strengthen resource mobilization. As you may gather evidence that you’re an attractive partner for another entity. So, you can collaborate, share funds as well as drive strategy success. It is part of the reason the often less vigorously pursued monitoring of the external environment is so important. When clients hear of these possibilities it makes them more eager to own performance management.

We deliberately include provision for monitoring and evaluation with every strategy planning engagement.

That lead us to the next two steps in the process, that is deciding together with the client what outputs and outcomes will be monitored. And developing or adapting indicators to monitor the delivery of those outcomes. Our plans are generally support by a performance management framework and systems, which would include key information for monitoring implementation such as the inputs, the outputs, the outcomes, the agreed impacts, and key performance indicators both for the organization in total as well as for funders and related accountability needs. This assists the organization with getting their angle and handle on its own results and for strengthening or advancing its overall strategy.

We can now look at the next step in the monitoring process — gathering baseline data.
This includes historical organizational performance data or program specific data. At times, we don’t have baseline data, especially if they are new clients or maybe the data gap is just for a particular program they’re just rolling out. If the organization doesn’t have baseline data, we might be able to gather data from other sources such as statistic from government departments, interviews or literature reviews and use that to start a baseline. We might even find some in a pre-planning organizational or environmental assessment. If not, they know that the monitoring and performance data that will be gathered further in the process will help to provide the baseline for going forward.

From there we move towards the heart of the matter —ensuring monitoring is planned and works to deliver improvement or desired impact. It means we have to lead the team into setting targets that are tied to the intended change or results if developing or adjusting the system in order to conduct the monitoring. This is done with the vision, desired results or end state in mind.

It involves a review of cost information, budgets, funding, infrastructure and technology capability, human resource, and the timing and frequency of collecting data, responsibility or data collection, levels of effort, method of collection, quality measures for indicators, and so on.
The format of data or evidence is also important. The information gathered is used in setting the monitoring targets as well as for tracking and analysis during monitoring. Targets are often set during planning, or during the quarterly reporting process. But it could also be for a specific assignment for a one-off result monitoring intervention, and the contracting organization is being left with guidance for continuing the process.

The process involves the integration of indicators, providing for intended user information needs and users, and desired impact from the global, national, organizational, customer, beneficiary or client, compliance and other stakeholder levels. Both long and short-term targets and indicator targets must be included. Data collect is verified, in some instances sources are verified, tools and methods may also be tested and adjusted, samples may also be tested etc.

We capture that kind of information to a large extent in our plan documents. We do so for each line item of the plan, allowing for expansion of those items to ensure that the strategy is broken out properly and supported by indicators and measures that support the strategy and the strategic plan and is trickled down to your operations plan. It makes monitoring or designing the monitoring process easier.

So, when we get to the monitoring activity itself and the creation of a monitoring system our plan documents can be tailored to create performance monitoring and management reports. They can be further adjusted to create the monthly report as well. In it, you have to input cumulative performance information that comes from the day-to-day activity processes that are suitable to be captured at a strategic level as well as higher level indicators.

We generally end up with something that can be adjusted easily for monthly, quarterly and annual reports. Each quarterly report displays cumulated data on performance for the next quarter and the final quarter; and the third quarter is adjusted to form the fourth or annual report.
That forms a key part of the monitoring system. A compendium of indicators with dictionary is also important in monitoring, so we generally give a complimentary compendium of indicators whenever, we develop a strategic plan or monitoring system.

The actual monitoring focuses on tracking progress, quality, standards and status on the performance targets and results. It is the Check that helps drive Improve in the (PDCA process). We will rise alarms or present greenlights, areas and opportunities for improvement in communicating the findings. The comparison to planned versus actual results is key to helping teams to understand their progress and level of urgency for making adjustments.

We combine the findings from the surveillance that we’ve performed, through reviewing reports, documents, and other sources. Here, we’re looking for consistency and truth, in terms of what is reported. We’ll perform surveys, interviews, samples and meetings to monitor the validity and reliability of information, as well as identify any problems. Because the team is busy performing management duties, they don’t have time to take on those activities. We do that and tie everything together and then develop a total analysis with recommendations.

Out of that process, we end up identifying any emergent strategies. We analyze problems, difference between plan theories and reality; deviations from planned activities; even deviations from how program logic said it would work. The information gathered is then used to come up with suggestions, recommendations or draw out corrective measures and follow ups. We identify gaps that may have been overlooked and new gaps that may arise out of the implementation process, and gain inside information for updating strategy plan.

Sometimes you may develop a business process improvement team or something to handle an improvement to make that change or to push through an initiative if you see it’s falling behind. It could be a business process improvement, but it could also be something for resourcing planned activity that’s not happening for some reason. That is an example of the Act. We look to see if the annual review was done; or if evaluation and reports were completed and submitted if the work is for an organization that’s implementing donor projects or government funded projects. We do that to see if they did their external evaluation in accordance with when it was scheduled to be done.

We generally host Monitoring reporting meetings that allows for management response and input. At this point, we have already identified internal champions and if we are adjunct external or internal team member, we play a key role in championing and facilitating the performance measurement meetings; or in leading them with strong backing from the leadership of the organization. Leading the meetings alongside leadership allows us to guide the floor and facilitate meetings towards learning and improvement. At times we might be driving the process in order to get the leadership to get into the driver’s seat for championing performance through that kind of process.

In our plans (strategic or monitoring) we ensure there’s a performance measurement calendar and visuals that support the PDCA, (the plan to, do, check, act) framework for continuous improvement, and results-based management or other blends. The visuals are comprised of two separate triangles. One triangle has expected outcomes and impacts at the level of the organization. This can also include the societal level of impact. In the middle of it, there are the program, initiatives, service, and product indicators related to outcomes; plus, others related to output, efficiency, cost and effectiveness indicators. At the base of the triangle are the internal and individual measures for individual performance coming from input and output processes. To tie those up, you stretch compliance quality improvement measures running up and down the line so they can see that has to be included.

The other triangle includes objective strategies, levels of effort, and a responsibility targets time line running down it. This is a PDCA visual to remind them to communicate findings; to act and to improve on.

Last, to ensure utility, we package the information and communicate the findings so that the potential impacts, feedback and information for driving the improvement, any decisions, and risk are communicated. We facilitate moments for reflection and look at what worked, what went well, what didn’t well; and why. We also look at, what could we have done better.

Overall, our monitoring approach involves establishing the importance of monitoring and reporting for organizational growth and accountability. We look at information needs in terms of assessments, targets and indicators that were agreed, quality and standard measures, and outcomes to monitor. We also look or other data sets that emerges during execution. We provide training in the use of performance monitoring and measurement frameworks and tools. We establish teams and assign roles for performance management and measurement, including the board and their responsibility for the corporate strategy plan. And we consider and design the reports and reporting tools to suit the different needs and for ensuring improvement processes are supported.

If we take a step back to look at how we plan to support monitoring you would understand why we include the annual report and ensure that the AGM is there, the financial reporting is there on the calendar in the plan document.

Hosted by IAF ahead of ASPConf2018.

See also:

Interview Transcript on IAF

Post-execution evaluation of the corporate strategy plan

Pre-implementation evaluation of  strategic plans

Strategy Execution Challenges–“Bridging the Strategy Execution Gap”

———————

Something good happened in Rosemont, Chicago. The Association for Strategic Planning Conference 2018.

Copyright © 2018 International Affairs Forum, Association for Strategic Planning, Magate Wildhorse, Meegan Scott
All Rights Reserved

iaf_logo_black magatelogogreen

BackStopping Solutions

Gallery

This gallery contains 4 photos.

Click the thumbnail or image to learn more about our backstopping solutions. Our backstopping solutions are available locally and internationally — face-to-face, virtually or blended. They are tailor-made for each consultant, organization, international development project, not-for-profit, business analyst, executive, government department, business … Continue reading

Carlos Zervigon—How I Got Walking with My Belly in My Hand for the PMP Designation

The Year was 2004 and the man was Carlos Zervigon, PMP Instructor.

I had been eying the PMP Course Ads in the Gleaner for a couple months with keen interest.

I already knew what to expect from the Faculty of the University of New Orleans both through face-to-face classroom interactions with—educators who knew how to facilitate learning —among them Dr. Paul Hensel, Dr. Alan Witt, Dr. J. Rabalais, Prof. Tim Ryan, Dr. Lilian Yee Fok, Dr. M. Kabir Hassan, and Dr. Steven Smith. I also knew what to expect when it came to social interaction with the Faculty through our Alumni Fundraising and Social Events.

So, what was holding me back? Did I really need to take PMP when I had been gobbling up the Project Management and Project Monitoring Methodologies taught by USAID and that of other donors especially the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB). Besides there was strategy which I wanted tied nicely to Finance and Policy, the MBA program had a major focus on Finance and we were encouraged to pursue Professional Certification soon after graduation and I was very keen on that. I had learnt through my work as a Corporate Strategy Planner that I could serve in both spheres —but which of the loves should I put my money on first?

It was a tough one given, the courses and designations had to be paid in US Dollars. The Project Management Office at the National Environment and Planning Agency was well stocked with huge binders on Project Management many of which were produced by the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)—and I was a bookworm with a bottom less pit of an appetite for its content.

The raging hunger had started when I served a USAID Project, the online Project Management and Project Monitoring courses (World Bank or IADB) I was taking brought even greater knowledge leaving me famished. Then NEPA’s HR Department announced that individuals who pursued professional development courses within a certain time frame would get their course fees refunded if they were successful and provided proof. My problem was solved—now I could kill two birds with one stone. I registered for the PMP Course with UNO Executive Education. Carlos Zervigon had a class full and several group learning exercises to facilitate over the days of the course. He was excellent, calm, and rich with knowledge. He also had a few living life tips to share. I was learning the PMP approach and I was snatching some of his learning facilitation techniques along the way as well.

Carlos shared PMP with me in a way that was practical and ready to apply on the job. Best of all I could now mix and match from the PMP Body of Knowledge and the Project and Program Management Principles and Practices expounded by International Donors and Governments.

With the satisfying and delightful course served up by Carlos my next stop for desserts and snacks was the Humming Bird Chapter of PMP and the other areas in which I was so hungry for knowledge, competence and skills. Still I walked around with “my belly in my hand”—ravenous for the PMP Designation. Then, finally work and travel came to a slower pace in Canada and I earned the PMP Designation in 2013. But the learning is never done— both that taught formally and learning that you extract as you apply those principles and practice to problem solving. Thanks Carlos and NEPA for a great start.

Meegan Scott, B.Sc. Hons, MBA, ATM-B, CTL, PMP

Verified PMP

 

Strategic Advisory & Implementation Help

strategic-advisory-and-implementation16

Strategic Advisory & Implementation Help

Have your organization recently lost funding from a key donor? Do you struggle to get funding for your projects and programs?

We can help you to make either problem a thing of the past. As your strategic advisory and implementation partner we help you to ensure that your strategy is coherent, congruent and being implemented on time and in budget.

We will serve as the go between that helps with:

  • Project | Program review — from the objective expert outsider perspective
  • Facilitate dialogue, provide guidance, monitoring, and communication for ensuring timely procurement and resource allocation in compliance with funder requirement
  • Lead strategy review, initiatives, and communications for winning back monies and stakeholder support for projects facing loss of funding.

Our solutions are tailored to fit your needs and budget. Ask about our mixed virtual and on-site solutions or virtual with live face-to-face interactions.

Let us help you stay focused, deliver more value, increase funding and gain the  competitive edge.

Contact Magate Wildhorse today!

Phone: 1647-845-5323

Click here to connect by Email.

Free Webinar Plus Help With Planning Matrix

Discover an easy way to create a planning and performance matrix for your organization.

Request a free webinar on how to develop your planning matrix today!
What you will learn?

How to create and use the planning matrix to:

  • Organize to get the right work done;
  • How to get more work for profit; and
  • How to improve your performance results.

Attend a webinar Free with no purchase obligation!

Why You Should Attend
There are 3 little things that often prevent an organization from achieving the competitive edge needed to succeed or thrive.
They are:

  • Getting organized in order to get work done;
  • Putting structures in place for getting work done; and
  • Getting more of the right work done for making a profit or surplus.

Many organizations have a business plan or a strategic plan.

Many host Board Retreats, strategic planning exercises, management meetings, trainings, and team building exercises yet fail to achieve the desired performance results.

No matter how hard they try they just can’t seem to get the right things done.

Where things fall apartThings generally fall apart at the point where strategy, execution, and execution tools should be tied together.

Why do things fall apart at this point?
Because there is generally no strategic management system for tying the two together.
But organizations can choose one of two proven tools for solving the problem, they are:

  • The Logical Framework Matrix; and the
  • Hoshin X-Matrix.

The tool you choose will depend on your processes and strategies.
Organizations that are implementing a LEAN Strategy and or Lean Process may prefer the Hoshin X-Matrix.
Either tool makes it so much easier to get your “Plan, Do, Check, Improve” right.

Tie the Right Knots

How We Can Help

  • We will create your Logical Framework  Matrix or your Hoshin X-Matrix
  • Provide hold your hand help to create Work Plans based on your Logical Framework Matrix
  • We will prepare, review and refine, or create your Quarterly and Annual Organizational Performance Reports based on your Planning Matrix

Thinking of buying a solution?

 savelogicad

Try before you buy! Request a free webinar for up to 3 members of your team.
Join the webinar free, from home or office, North America, Caribbean, Europe, Pacific, or Africa.
 
Click here to request your webinar or phone: 1(647) 854-5323
Paid webinars for staff teams are also available maximum 15 participants.
Face-to-face workshops – maximum 20 participants.

 
to you from meegan

Where to Shop for ―Remote and On-site Business and Executive Solutions

  • Virtual Project Management and Planning War Rooms
  • Corporate Strategy Planning
  • Organizational Assessments
  • Project and Program Planning/ Re-design
  • Work Plan Development
  • Workshops
  • Capacity Building
  • Research  &  Literature Reviews
  • In-Country Sales Support―Caribbean Exporters (Coming soon, Canadian Exporters)
  • Change Marketing
  • Strategic Marketing Planning
  • Business Plans
  • Annual Strategic Operational Plans
  • Project and Program Monitoring and Evaluation
  • Help with Project or Program Coordination and Management
  • Executive Coaching
  • Entrepreneur Development Training
  • Off-site Project and Program Management and/ Measurement

Solutions are offered face-to-face, virtually or blended.

Magate Wildhorse

Serving Canada, USA, UK, the British Virgin Islands, US Virgin Islands, Caribbean, and Pacific States

phone for bizplan

Click here to request a meeting | proposal | free consultation | or workshop