11 Examples Of Content Creation – Waking Giants

It’s all we hear when it comes to creating our online presence. Content. Content. Content. But as we witness on a daily basis, most people are not writers and don’t believe they actually have anything to say.

We believe that’s wrong and you simply need to find a process to share that knowledge.

When it comes to achieving success with content marketing, business owners need to consider three major factors:

  • Consistency
  • Engagement
  • Diversity

Unfortunately, many business owners get stuck on two of the factors above. They find their publishing rhythm and learn to keep things lively for their audiences by engaging them on social media. Nonetheless, many tend to completely forget about content diversity.

Ignoring diversity is something that usually happens when you discover content that resonates with your audience. For example, let’s say an e-commerce website that sells jewellery hires a young and attractive spokeswoman to introduce new products. The marketing manager notices that videos of the spokeswoman are very well-received, so a decision is made to produce a new video each week; this would go against the content diversity concept.

To avoid getting stuck on a content type, here are 11 examples of content creation to get you started:

1. Cartoons and Comic Strips

Clever drawings that make fun of situations that should be serious but end up being amusing are incredibly effective. What is interesting about comic strips and cartoons is how much of an impact they have when they are related to the B2B world. For example, a cartoon that makes fun of long-winded meetings that get nothing accomplished can be great for a company that delivers office supplies.

2. Visuals & Pictures Do 80% Of The Work

Content marketers know that every text article they publish should have at least one picture, and this is due to the fact that most netizens will only click on images. This practice can be elevated to featuring a single eye-catching photo that relates to the brand. For example, a pizza delivery shop can share a digital photo of a pie as it comes out of the oven.

3. Getting Creative With Statistics

Share insights that may add value to your customers and educate them. It doesn’t have to be complicated. Keep it eye-catching, funny, curious… you have so much information that you can share.

4. Notable Quotes

This content creation idea is simple yet extremely effective for sharing in social media channels. For example… Check out our Instagram.

5. Allegorical Images

Social media netizens enjoy positive and clever reinforcement. Posting the expression “feeling like a box of budgies” with a photo of a nest box filled with fledglings will help to communicate positive thoughts.

6. Short How-To Or Explainer Videos

Instagram and Vine are powerful platforms for posting short video content. But think how you can add value to your audience. For example, to your staff through training, or to your customers by providing insights on how to get the most out of your product. You don’t need to create a Hollywood blockbuster, simply make life a little easier or clearer for everyone.

7. Screenshots

This is another content idea that works amazingly well. For some reason, online audiences respond very well to explanatory screenshots. A mobile app development firm could publish a screenshot of a future project as it is being coded along with notes and explanations.

8. Answering Questions

The respected social network Quora is great for knowledge-based branding and self-promotion. A financial planning firm that is active in Quora can set their account to post answers directly to WordPress.

9. Infographics

Visual representations of data are as old as math tables and maps, but they have always been very effective. Data visualization content is three times more likely to be shared than a text article, and online businesses that regularly post infographics report getting nearly 15% more Web traffic on the day of publishing.

10. Podcasts

In the age of YouTube, many people find it easy to dismiss podcasts as relics from the iPod era; however, marketing analysts report that podcast subscribers tend to become loyal clients and customers. There are two keys to podcast success: production values and distribution channels. Creating quality podcasts is easier said than done, but it can be very rewarding as part of your strategy for brand development.

11. Giving Audiences a Voice

Going beyond engagement means jumping into the realm of user-generated content. Testimonials are just a start; strong brands will always have enthusiastic clients and customers who are ready to create content for them. Use the information to build a content community that can increase your reach and brand value. After all your customers should be your greatest source of new opportunity.

While we have not covered every facet on content in this blog, we hope it helps you to get off the starting blocks. For more information take a look at some of our other articles on the importance of content creation.

.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:60% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 3.2%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 3.2%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:66.6666666667% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.88%;margin-left : 2.88%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:100% !important;order : 0;margin-top : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-top : 0px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-right : 0px;padding-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 0px;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;margin-top : 0px;margin-bottom : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 0%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 0%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 0%;margin-left : 0%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 24px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 48px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 0px;}}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:30px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Continue Reading

<!– related-posts
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:83.3333333333% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.304%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.304%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:83.3333333333% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.304%;margin-left : 2.304%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 70px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 80px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-3{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-3{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Contact Waking Giants.

If you want the advantage of purposeful strategy within your business, get in touch today.

.fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-text, .fusion-button.button-1 i {color:#ffffff;}.fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-icon-divider{border-color:#ffffff;}.fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-text, .fusion-button.button-1:hover i,.fusion-button.button-1:focus .fusion-button-text, .fusion-button.button-1:focus i,.fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-text, .fusion-button.button-1:active{color:#ffffff;}.fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-icon-divider, .fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-icon-divider, .fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-icon-divider{border-color:#ffffff;}.fusion-button.button-1:hover, .fusion-button.button-1:focus, .fusion-button.button-1:active{border-color:#f5b41a;}.fusion-button.button-1 {border-color:#f5b41a;border-radius:32px;}.fusion-button.button-1{background: #f5b41a;}.fusion-button.button-1:hover,.button-1:focus,.fusion-button.button-1:active{background: #f5b41a;}Contact Us
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:75% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.56%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.56%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:75% !important;margin-bottom : 30px;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.56%;margin-left : 2.56%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:100% !important;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-top : 102px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-bottom : 32px;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-top : 40px;padding-bottom : 40px;}}

Do You Have A Customer-Centric Strategy For Your Business?

It seems like an obvious thing to point out, but your understanding of your customer needs is a critical part of every business’s strategy.

Over the years, I have seen many businesses claiming to have values like ‘customer first’ and ‘customer-centric, but what does that mean?

There are two trains of thought on this, firstly there is the perception of being customer-centric, and there is the operational focus on serving your customer to the best of your ability.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to realise which will create success for your business. An empty promise to a customer will cost you dearly down the road.

Suppose you genuinely believe in the significance of a robust customer-centric strategy. In that case, it starts with you as a leader and how you create a culture of serving both your internal and external customers.

From a leader’s point of view, your internal customer is your team. Once again, obvious, but maybe not so much when it comes to translating it into customer-centricity.

If you are unclear on the principles you will use to serve your customer, how can you expect your team to deliver on the customer-centric strategy you have decided on?

In my experience in both the b2b and eCommerce spaces, you need to include a few simple principles into your strategic planning process to curate an environment that strives for continuous and consistent customer success.

The first on the list is your company values. Your company values should inform how you operationalise your promise to your team and your customer; this will result in a series of actions and expectations to create success.

By operationalising your values, you can design a framework that your team can operate within that creates a consistent customer experience. It might be how you talk to them on the phone or communicate complex information, the small interactions that compound to deliver the way you do things. The result should be a great customer experience.

From that, we can move into the next principle, expectations. Do you understand what ‘good’ looks like? With consumers having such abundant access to feedback tools such as Google and social media, you have to clarify what defines a good customer experience.

It might be as simple as a score out of 5. If we agree that 5 is the perfect experience, then we need to create the expectation of both how we deliver that experience and how we will give the customer the reason to provide that feedback.

I have seen feedback examples using the metric of ‘rate out of 5’ where people will not provide a 5 rating out of principle. No matter how good the service and product, they don’t give 5s. You need to factor that into your review process to not look for perfection and demand unrealistic expectations.

.fusion-imageframe.imageframe-4{ margin-bottom : 16px;}Kickstarter Course

There is no getting away from the nuances of a customer-centric strategy when you are dealing with humans. Once again, a clear set of expectations need to be set for customer interaction; this is where empathy will play a significant part in your success.

Imagine your customers calling and can’t pay their bills; they are stressed and upset. You could say, well, we need to get paid; we have bills to pay too. How do you this is customer-centric?

As part of your strategy, you need to factor in the emotional state that your customer will be in at different stages of their journey with you. If they are in a diminished state, you can choose to support or sink them.

Creating a Customer-Centric Strategy for Your Business

Their bill of $79.04 might not be a lot to you, but it might be the most significant stress in their life that they can’t solve. Your understanding of that situation will enable you to move the relationship forward positively where both parties leave with their needs met.

The net gain from employing empathy means your team operates within your values system, and you have served the customer who will share that experience and become loyal to your way of doing things.

I have heavily focused on your people, but how do your people and your customers align with a customer-centric approach? Right people, right customers.

It’s a critical part of the people element of your strategic plan. If you have a highly complex product that needs a high level of support, you cannot expect to deliver on customers’ needs with untrained staff. Equally, you cannot expect a great team to support the wrong type of customer.

Serving the wrong customer will inevitably cause challenges and misalignment of expectations from the start. While we want to be customer-centric, we need to be realistic in meeting their expectations.

You can’t have a customer team to support a $3 sale as the value of that item to the customer is so small they will move on. But if you are selling something like a car for $40,000, there is an expectation of a high support level.

In the first instance, you would use your strategy aligned with technology, but you would use human support to wrap around the customer and fulfill the customer journey in the second.

These principles will give you the foundations of what an excellent customer-centric strategy should look like. Within these principles, there will be dozens if not 1000’s of small interactions that will influence that highly valued praise from your customer.

Whether you are using technology, people, or a blend of both, don’t lose sight as a leader that you are a human; serving humans – serving humans, and technology will only ever go so far.

By definition, we are a tribe and thrive on human interaction and, where possible positive experiences, so don’t leave that to chance in building your culture around the customer. Because if you don’t, someone else will.

.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:60% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 3.2%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 3.2%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:66.6666666667% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.88%;margin-left : 2.88%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:100% !important;order : 0;margin-top : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-top : 0px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-right : 0px;padding-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 0px;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;margin-top : 0px;margin-bottom : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 0%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 0%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 0%;margin-left : 0%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 24px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 48px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 0px;}}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Contact Waking Giants.

If you want the advantage of purposeful strategy within your business, get in touch today.

.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1{border-color:#f5b41a;border-radius:8px 8px 8px 8px;background:#f5b41a;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active i{color:#ffffff;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus{border-color:#f5b41a;background:#f5b41a;}Contact Us
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.56%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.56%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-bottom : 30px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.56%;margin-left : 2.56%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:100% !important;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 70px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 20px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-bottom : 32px;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 40px;padding-bottom : 40px;}}

6 Steps Of The Strategic Planning Process

The key objective of this any strategic planning process is to gain a greater understanding of why you do what you do and how you want the future to look.

Each phase will accumulate your thoughts and ideas, rationalise what they mean to you and help you create your plan for the future.

Simplicity is key. To aid the process we have broken the whole 6-step process down:

.fusion-imageframe.imageframe-4{ margin-bottom : +3%;}FREE Reset Business Workshop

Step 1: Start with Why

What drives your business? Your purpose.

Let’s get the obvious myth out of the way first. Business is not all about profit. Profit is what gives you more choice.

Now that we have that out of the way we can get into the fluffy stuff. Simon Sinek famously said that we should ‘Start With Why’ and I tend to agree.

Having been in business for over 10 years, I look back at the really tough times, and I know why they were tough. A lack of purpose.

The never-ending treadmill of making salaries, constant growth, etc, etc… can get real boring real quick. Let alone the impact on other parts of your life.

You don’t have to be saving humanity or the earth necessarily, but to have meaning behind your actions only makes sense. We must allow ourselves to enjoy the process, feel good about what we do, and ultimately be fulfilled by the process as much as the outcomes.

So let’s start by asking the most important question… why are you in business? 

What does success look like for you?

Have you ever been asked that question? Read it again. The question isn’t are you successful? But what does it look like for you?

Each of us ultimately wants a range of things from our lives and businesses, but they will fall into a few catch-all statements:

  1. Being healthy
  2. Happy family
  3. More freedom
  4. Feeling fulfilled

We can argue beyond that, but as humans, we are all fairly close in what actually makes us tick. Once again the money element comes from a combination of the four.

Equally some of the richest people in the world are the least happy and some of the poorest, are the happiest.

I know in the past I have fallen into the trap of wanting what others have, but that is a path to disappointment. If you are building a business of any size it is likely to be there to achieve a goal that means something to you.

We need to know what that is because that is what keeps you focused in the darkest moments.

Where do values fit in your strategy?

We all live our lives through a set of values, but it’s the ones that affect how we treat others that matter.

6 Steps of the Strategic Planning Process

Yet another cliché is the use of values within a business or organisation. A poster on a wall, printed on a key ring and usually consist of honestyintegrity, and customer service.

Kind of a cop-out really. The first two should be a given and the third really comes with the territory.

True values will drive the positive or negative behaviour of a person or group. It is a tool for accountability in every situation.

For example, let me share ours:

Make it happen – As you will see from the structure of this course.

Grow together – This is based on a true focus on the team and our long-term relationships with our clients and community.

Ditch the baggage – Growth mindset over fixed mindset… what got us here won’t get us where we want to go.

So, are you using your values to be better or paying lip service to a corporate process?

Step 2: Determine your target market

What market pain will you solve?

All good businesses provide some kind of solution.

In the most basic terms, your business will be built on the thing you want to solve. Do you want to make the best muffins in the world, do you want to develop technology that makes clean water, or do you want to help people with their marketing?

Whatever it is you do, you are solving something the other party can’t or won’t do themselves.

Some of the best ideas are not bleeding edge, they are very very simple and practical.

Think about HelloFresh. What are they selling? Food, food in a box, meals? Nope, they are selling time. Time, that you can use to do other things.

And that’s the other thing to think about. What business are you actually in?

They are in the time business but you would think food. Gym owners are not in the fitness business they are in the confidence business.

Who is your core customer?

When you challenge the thing you do and connect it with the problem you WANT to solve you have the foundation of a business.

Please never say everyone is your customer.

It is something that has been uttered to me in the past. But when you look in-depth at who you want to serve with your product or service, being focused on the right customer will always prevail.

Think about it, does your 8-year-old daughter have the same needs as your 80-year-old grandmother? No.

Their needs are different, they communicate in different ways with different comprehension. Their ability to consume your product will depend on their circumstances and needs.

For example, they could both consume McDonald’s, a Happy meal for your daughter, and a cheeseburger for you’re dear old gran.

But what if gran has wheat allergies? In theory, she can eat a cheeseburger but does McDonald’s offer a gluten-free version?

If you can visualise your core customer in human terms you can match their needs and your solution.

This is about the following:

  • Where are they – online and offline?
  • When might they need/consume your products/services?
  • What means do they have to pay?
  • How often?
  • Their influences
  • Your competitions offering to them.

These are all questions that allow you to build out the ‘persona’ or ‘personas’ that create your core customer.

What is your target market?

Your target market is the specific group of people at which your product or service is aimed.

A target market can be composed of a broad group, such as women in the UK, or it can be quite narrow, such as working, time-poor, parents in Victoria. The group you choose will depend on the particular consumer needs your product is addressing.

To pinpoint your target market, you’ll need to start by analysing data about your customers and competitors. Here’s how to do it:

How to determine your target market

  1. Analyse your existing customers
  2. Know your product’s benefits
  3. Investigate your competitors
  4. Segment your audience
  5. Refine your research

You can use tools such as a Google Keyword Tool to see what your audience might be searching for in certain places and at what times throughout the calendar year.

Step 3: Identify your “secret sauce”

Identify your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats.

SWOT analysis is a strategic planning technique used to help you identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats related to business competition or project planning. While a little old school, it is a very simple process that you and your team can use to check in on the current status and focus on where you need to go.

This technique, which operates by ‘peeling back layers of the company’ is designed for use in the preliminary stages of decision-making processes and can be used as a tool for evaluation of the strategic position of your business.

It is intended to specify the objectives of the business venture or project and identify the internal and external factors that are favourable and unfavourable to achieving those objectives.

Ask as many questions as possible without ego to generate meaningful information for each category to make the tool useful and identify your competitive advantage.

Remember, dig deep and be open, there are always nuggets of gold hidden within your business.

  • Strengths: characteristics of the business or project that give it an advantage over others.
  • Weaknesses: characteristics that place the business or project at a disadvantage relative to others.
  • Opportunities: elements in the environment that the business or project could exploit to its advantage.
  • Threats: elements in the environment that could cause trouble for the business or project.

What is your secret sauce?

It used to be called your USP, but we call it your ‘Secret Sauce’ but in reality, there are few businesses that have one single thing that stands them apart.

Like a good meal, it’s the recipe and the way it is put together that makes the magic.

We believe that every business has 3-5 elements that make, them. It might be simple things like the way you look after your customers, your charging process, unique features of a product… but it’s the way they come together that can set you apart.

Rather than looking for one thing… think of your offering as a recipe and how you make it taste amazing for your customers.

Where do you sit in the mind of the customer?

Brand positioning is defined as the conceptual place you want to own in the target consumer’s mind — the benefits you want them to think of when they think of your brand. This is the space where they will choose you over a competitor, even when there may be a difference in price.

An effective brand positioning strategy will maximise customer relevancy and competitive distinctiveness, in maximising brand value.

Key objectives of brand positioning include relevance, differentiation, and credibility/attainability, as described here:

  • Relevance is priority #1. Customers must find the brand appealing. If not, the brand won’t make it into the consideration set, regardless of how differentiated or credible it is.
  • Differentiation is critical and the key driver of positioning success. The brand must be unique vs. competitive offerings. Your ‘Secret Sauce’.
  • Credible and attainable is the final measure. If you cannot credibly provide the offering, the customer is left with an empty promise.

The Parking Lot

The parking lot is where we want you to explore all of the learning so far.

Strike out the things that you don’t want to pursue, explore in more detail the ones that will have the most impact, and that you can see a way of delivering in the next 90 days.

You might not have all the answers, but knowing what not to do is just as important as agreeing on what to do!

.fusion-imageframe.imageframe-5{ margin-top : +2%;}FREE Reset Business Workshop

Step 4: Find your strategic opportunities

6 Steps of the Strategic Planning Process

What are your strategic opportunities?

Now we have done some serious digging and understanding around what will have the biggest impact in the short term to meet our goals, it’s time to reduce the focus right down to the key things that are going to make the most difference.

Say you have 20 ideas, in reality, we can’t and shouldn’t be trying to do all of them, not even half.

The more focused and effective we are the more likely we are going to be able to stay the course and deliver the result we want.

So let’s create a refined shortlist. And be tough! We are not looking for business as usual. Let’s really move the needle.

What to action and what to ignore.

Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. The focus of any good strategy is learning what not to do as well as what to do.

Decide your strategic moves.

Time to take action!

After all the thinking now it is time to commit to what will make it happen.

Reduce all those great ideas into the TOP 4 that will make a difference. You need to challenge them at every step. Make sure that you are not doing what’s easy just to get a result.

In one of our own planning sessions, we couldn’t find a fourth action that was going to make a massive difference, so we stuck with three.

On another of our businesses, we stuck with 1 THING for our 30-day plan to make sure we could deliver on it.

There will be plenty of day-to-day things that you have to deliver. But think of these as the special projects, the things that need that a little extra, but will have the most impact.

See how disciplined you can be, do less, to create more.

Step 5: Create a framework for accountability

Change of status – what is the result you are looking for?

Right back at the start, we looked at the purpose of both your business and therefore your strategic focus.

Now we want to challenge the future state that you are working towards. Think and feel into the future of what it will be like.

It could be financial freedom, operating in different countries, more time with family or simply selling your business.

We are coming full circle to remind ourselves why we are going to put the work in.

Because a new strategy isn’t going to be easy. Tough decisions will need to be made and not all will be popular.

Embedding your energy and focus into something that you find meaningful, will help you endure whatever needs to be done.

Who and what? A strategy needs accountability.

Your business is very simple. A group of people working together for an outcome.

Another reason strategy fails is the lack of accountability and the wrong people doing the wrong things.

A strong strategy isn’t the full responsibility of the leader. In fact, the leader should be curating the process with a group of people taking on responsibility for delivering the outcomes.

This is where we need to be laser-focused on the Why, the What, and the How. 

If you want others to help, they need to know what you are trying to achieve and how they can be part of the process and the outcome.

What does success look like? Your key numbers.

How do we measure success and more importantly progress?

Remember if you are clear on your outcomes you will create awareness around how and what got you there for future goals.

Don’t over analyse otherwise you won’t have time to do the doing. We tend to focus on some really focused criteria to understand our strategic success. For example in our e-commerce business these are critical to us:

  1. Returning Customer Rate – the higher over 30% the better. Happy customers you see, plus they cost less to support future sales with.
  2. Conversion Rate (at Checkout) – it’s easy to get traffic, but we want the right traffic. The higher the conversion rate, the more focused your message and marketing can get.
  3. Cost Per Acquisition – we know exactly how much we are willing to spend to get the first sale and we focus on keeping that low, but relevant as we know our profit is in the 2, 3, and 4th sales and so on.

They will be different for different strategies. But these three give us massive insight into the way our customer service, digital marketing, and channel strategies are working.

Step 6: Develop your 4 core objectives and measurable results

We choose to focus on no more than 4 core objectives with a maximum of 3-5 key results that will help us drive the delivery of the core objective.

The key actions that you will take, when, and who will deliver them to move you closer to your goal. The results may be delivered over days, weeks or months, or even years. They must be a catalyst that keeps you on track towards success.

Thinking about your future

We started by thinking short-term, but now we need to start to embrace the longer-term goals. The short-term planning should be steps toward a bigger outcome.

Keep it simple, aspirational, and slightly out of reach so you have to work for it. We recommend making plans that plan for progress over 30, and 90 days, then 12 months, 3 and 5 years.

The long-term future may not be 100% clear, must it must be clear enough so you have a feel for what it can look like. The goal is not to have all of the answers, but enough to keep you focused.

Where the rubber hits the road

This part is all about momentum. Any long-term plan starts with the first 30 days, in fact, it starts with the first day. What is the series of actions you are going to take to create the momentum you need?

One day at a time! 

The secret of success.

There IS no secret. Your strategic plan may get you through 1 year or 20 years. But the thing we can guarantee what will make a difference; is your focus, energy, timing, and actions. As a business leader, what underpins that whole skillset is the ability to stay the course, and resilience.

You will stare defeat in the face, it’s how you deal with it that will dictate your future successes.

In summary:

So many strategic planning processes fail because they are too complicated. This 6 step process is focused on creating purposeful and targeted outcomes that you and your team can follow and take action on.

If it’s too complex, unfulfilling and in the wrong direction, failure is guaranteed.

Keep your strategy simple and your purpose top of mind and they will guide you to any goal you set yourself.

.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:60% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 3.2%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 3.2%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:66.6666666667% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.88%;margin-left : 2.88%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:100% !important;order : 0;margin-top : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-top : 0px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-right : 0px;padding-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 0px;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;margin-top : 0px;margin-bottom : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 0%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 0%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 0%;margin-left : 0%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 24px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 48px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 0px;}}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:30px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Continue Reading

<!– related-posts
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:83.3333333333% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.304%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.304%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:83.3333333333% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.304%;margin-left : 2.304%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 70px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 80px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-3{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-3{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Contact Waking Giants.

If you want the advantage of purposeful strategy within your business, get in touch today.

.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1{border-color:#f5b41a;border-radius:32px 32px 32px 32px;background:#f5b41a;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active i{color:#ffffff;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus{border-color:#f5b41a;background:#f5b41a;}Contact Us
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:75% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.56%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.56%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:75% !important;margin-bottom : 30px;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.56%;margin-left : 2.56%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-13{width:100% !important;}.fusion-builder-column-13 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-top : 102px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-bottom : 32px;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-7{ padding-top : 40px;padding-bottom : 40px;}}

What Are The Most Important Leadership Skills? – Waking Giants

Being a leader isn’t just about leading the charge towards success, but being able to grow and nurture those around you on that journey.

That comes with the need for a leadership toolbox that enables you to develop important leadership skills that allow you to be impactful in any situation.

Your leadership skills are like any skills, they need to be constantly developed and improved as you, your team, and your business evolve.

To create great businesses, we need to be great leaders, therefore our leadership journey starts on day one.

Here are some of the most important qualities and skills necessary for leadership:

1. Ability to Lead

This connects closely with your ability to share your vision. An essential component of leadership is the ability to bring others along on the journey. That means having a clear vision, providing purpose for those who work alongside you, and providing a clear path to success. The buck stops with you after all.

2. Effective Communication

All great leaders are great communicators. Understanding how to share information and ensure it is retained is a core skill. Each person learns in their own way so you have to be aware of that.

Rather than assume that the other party doesn’t understand, it might be that they don’t learn that way. By understanding the other person, you can develop the right way to share ideas, feedback, and support that gets the right outcome for both parties.

3. Relationship Building

A passion for people and connection will increase the positive influence of your leadership. Long gone are the days when being a leader meant having the biggest office and little interaction with your team.

With new working environments developing constantly, being front and centre is becoming more and more important. Access to leaders is critical for true connection and understanding under all circumstances.

This isn’t limited to staff but all relationships that enable your business to operate and thrive. After all, all business is about people in some shape or form.

What Are The Most Important Leadership Skills?

4. Perceptive of Team Needs

Right people in the right seats is an old cliché but it is going to fast-track success for the business if the right people are doing what they are good at and enjoy. As a leader, it is essential that you don’t silo people into such fixed roles. There is often hidden talent in all teams that are waiting to be found. A leader’s role is to constantly be looking for ways to develop all aspects of the team and the talents that sit beyond their cv.

5. Trustworthiness

Trustworthiness should be a default of any leader along with integrity. But what makes really great leaders is for them to be open, vulnerable, and approachable, this is what creates trust.

Being able to have strong and fulfilling conversations where each party knows that the other is sharing the right trust and intent for the best outcome.

6. Time Management

Great leaders not only have to manage their own time, but they also have to create a culture of accountability when it comes to the impact of their time management on that of others.

It’s not just about being where you said you would, but understanding the value of time on stress, budgets, and profit. Businesses that are run well reduce stress, create an environment of strong and clear expectations, and move quickly towards success.

7. Commitment

Great leaders are committed to their business, their employees, and their customers. A humanistic leader will think beyond the numbers, work with the right people and not give up when the going gets tough. This shows your team that they can rely on you and your vision.

8. Problem Solving

All leaders must know how to solve problems for their team and company, in fact, it is one of your core leadership skills. Essentially businesses are by their very definition there to solve a problem for another party. But often it’s about understanding what the real problem is in the first place that is what creates the best outcome. That requires other key skills including; curiosity, critical thinking, and a passion to challenge the status quo.

What Are The Most Important Leadership Skills?

9. Confidence

Self-doubt can slow your leadership as arrogance. Confidence shows your team they can trust that you are taking the right path. But confidence is earned through success and failure. The ability to take planned and considered risks helps you build resilience and therefore confidence in all aspects of your business from disruption to closing a sale.

10. Inspire Others

Leaders inspire by doing. Managers manage the process, leaders inspire those around them to understand and believe what is possible, even if they don’t have all the answers.

By showing the way by doing you will help others on their journey of growth and fulfillment.

11. Decision-Making Capabilities

While decision-making is critical for all leaders, it is also about the cadence at which you make decisions and your ability to allow others to make decisions for you. If you have to make hundreds of decisions a day you will soon burn out.

Decide what needs to be you, and what needs to be delegated to others. Remember no decision is worse than the wrong decision.

12. Accountability

It’s one of the toughest leadership skills to own and master. Poor leadership will lean into blaming, strong servant leadership will ask why the situation is as it is. If you as a leader can hold yourself accountable and provide a fair framework for others, you remove blame and encourage ownership.

13. Delegation and Empowerment

You cannot do everything. Literally. That’s one of the biggest lessons to learn and quickly.

Businesses simply do not grow if you do not empower and delegate to others. Leaders accept that they are not experts in everything and they understand how to make themselves redundant in key roles as they grow the organisation.

This comes with massive awareness and trust in others. But before you delegate, communicate, train and support, that will help you create strong and clear expectations.

14. Empathy

Leaders should develop empathy with those that they serve. And that’s the critical lesson, as a leader you serve others every day and the only way for the relationship to grow is to be able to step into the shoes of that other person. This builds greater understanding and connection in all situations.

Final thoughts

Your job as a leader is never done. While you are serving others you have to continually assess your own leadership skills, where you are weak, where you are strong and what you can do to improve them to be a great leader.

.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:60% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 3.2%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 3.2%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:66.6666666667% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.88%;margin-left : 2.88%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:100% !important;order : 0;margin-top : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-top : 0px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-right : 0px;padding-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 0px;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;margin-top : 0px;margin-bottom : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 0%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 0%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 0%;margin-left : 0%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 24px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 48px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 0px;}}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Contact Waking Giants.

If you want the advantage of purposeful strategy within your business, get in touch today.

.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1{border-color:#f5b41a;border-radius:8px 8px 8px 8px;background:#f5b41a;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active i{color:#ffffff;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus{border-color:#f5b41a;background:#f5b41a;}Contact Us
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.56%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.56%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-bottom : 30px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.56%;margin-left : 2.56%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:100% !important;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 70px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 20px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-bottom : 32px;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 40px;padding-bottom : 40px;}}

The Measures Of Success – What Are OKRs And How To Use Them

There are lots of choices when it comes to strategic planning methodology, but there are few that provide laser focus, like using objectives and key results.

What are the objectives and key results?

The definition of “OKRs” is “Objectives and Key Results.” It is a collaborative goal-setting tool used by teams and individuals to set challenging, ambitious goals with measurable results. OKRs are how you track progress, create alignment, and encourage engagement around measurable goals.

Source: whatmatters.com

So, why should your leadership team use OKRs to set your strategic direction? Simplicity. OKRs provide a framework that is both simple and team-driven.

Too many strategic plans are driven by the senior leadership group and fail to translate down to their organisation layers. More important than the strategy itself is the execution, and the most junior job might drive the implementation in your entire organisation.

You can’t expect every person in your business to read pages and pages of planning notes. You need to share the overall vision with them and enable them to do their part without the need for micromanagement.

The value in using OKR planning is that it focuses you and the objectives (i.e. where you want to land) on outcomes that will significantly shift your business.

For example: Improving our website is an objective, but only if it will make a difference.

What if 70% of your sales come from other sources? It may be a vanity objective that serves little value.

But if that 70% of sales need to be educated on your value proposition and feel that the website is letting you down, then improving the website may provide a conversion lift to 80%.

If we take that objective and break it down, it may look something like this:

Objective: Improve the company website to enable the delivery of sales information.

  • Key result 1: Source online specialists to audit the website and make recommendations.
  • Key result 2: Engage website designer and developer to build a new website to meet needs.
  • Key result 3: Develop a new content strategy and engage a writer for a new website.
  • Key result 4: Optimise website for search engines based on search trends and customer profiles.
  • Key result 5: Create a top-of-the-funnel offer to engage users to request more information about your product.

What you can see from this simple example is a pragmatic approach to the way you deliver the objective through key results.

What are the key results?

These are the actions taken to deliver the objective – strategy versus strategic execution—planning versus doing.

In the example above, you should be able to see how the actions will deliver the result. By working in this way, you can break down the process and share it with your team.

In my experience, OKRs need to have as few as possible active goals at any one time. When you have too many goals, you will find your time and resource is stretched to the point that you struggle to achieve any of the results.

Another benefit of OKRs is their focus on accountability and NOT aiming for perfection. In John Doerr’s book Measure What Matters, there are endless examples of companies like Google that accept that sometimes 80% success is far more important than 100%.

Why? OKRs are about making strategic progress in the most critical parts of your business. If they are business as usual goals, then there is no stretch, creativity, and positive change. If you are working towards perfection, you should expect failure.

A close friend once said that often 5% is not growing; it’s just standing still; if you want to grow, you have the reach for the goals that will stretch you. That’s OKRs.

What are OKRs and How to Use Them in Your Strategic Plan

.fusion-imageframe.imageframe-4{ margin-bottom : 16px;}Kickstarter Course

How do you use OKRs in your strategic planning process?

As you can see, the concept behind OKRs is to make strategic planning and results accessible to your whole company while creating significant change.

Strategic planning is no longer the magic that is only conjured up in the boardroom but a process and tool that the whole company can help create and participate in.

Before you get to your OKRs, there is the housekeeping that we all need to do when we are revising our strategic plans. Where are we now? Where are we heading? Who do we want to serve? Where are you going to play?

Without the fundamentals in place, the strategic objectives may be taking you down the wrong path. Get the basics right before you jump into the big moves.

Most OKRs are delivered over 90 days in part or whole, some OKRs may take years to produce, but you will chip away at them in 30 or 90-day cycles. This will enable you to get critical momentum and not overwhelm your team.

OKRs are not there to kill creativity but to ensure that you use your time wisely on the most important things. And they may change. As you move through several cycles, you will learn what is essential and what isn’t.

In our last OKR cycle, we realised that one of the 90-day objectives was unattainable and not going to drive results. So we scrapped it.

That’s the beauty of it; with such focus, you can make quick decisions on what is working and what isn’t, enabling you to change so you can keep on track with your overall vision.

Once you have the groundwork done its time to answer some key questions:

  • Where do we want to be in 90 days?
  • What is the thing that will make that happen?
  • What do we need to park for the next 90 days?
  • Is what we are trying to achieve going to stretch us but also deliver results?
  • Who needs to be involved?
  • Who will be accountable for delivering key results?

Everything in objectives and key results is about clarifying the objective and clarity of accountability on delivery.

Most strategic plans die in a drawer somewhere, only to be revealed once you have missed the target and are looking to blame someone.

Once you have outlined your objectives and key results (3-4 objectives and 3-5 key results for each), make sure that you communicate the information with everyone that can directly affect the objective’s aim.

You do not need pages and pages of waffles when it comes to sharing your vision. This is an opportunity to allow your entire team to drive the success of the business. Your job as a leader is to provide all the support and resource they need to deliver the result.

How do you create accountability around your OKRs?

What are OKRs and How to Use Them in Your Strategic Plan

Over-communicate them. If you do morning huddles, check in on them. If you have weekly team meetings, discuss if you are on track or off track and any support your team might need.

Look for constant feedback so you can tweak them if they are straying off course and correct quickly.

Above all, with this level of focus, you must be patient. OKRs are about the discipline of taking many small actions that deliver deliberate and focused outcomes.

What makes for great OKRs?

  • Less is more
  • Aspire and do
  • Share the responsibility
  • Be patient
  • Communication is king
  • Progress, not perfection!

Objectives and key results have helped some of the world’s largest companies innovate and deliver tools and services we take for granted every day, some taking years to develop. OKRs can work for you too.

If you are struggling to focus your energy on the RIGHT things, you can get started today with our strategic planning courses or book a workshop with our Head of Client Strategy to realise your potential today.

.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:60% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 3.2%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 3.2%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:66.6666666667% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.88%;margin-left : 2.88%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-11{width:100% !important;order : 0;margin-top : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-11 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-top : 0px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 60px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5-1{ padding-right : 0px;padding-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 0px;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;margin-top : 0px;margin-bottom : 0px;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 0%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 0%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 0%;margin-left : 0%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-10{width:100% !important;order : 0;}.fusion-builder-column-10 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 24px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 48px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-5{ padding-top : 0px;}}
@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important;margin-left:0px!important;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-title.fusion-title-2{margin-top:10px!important; margin-right:0px!important;margin-bottom:20px!important; margin-left:0px!important;}}

Contact Waking Giants.

If you want the advantage of purposeful strategy within your business, get in touch today.

.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1{border-color:#f5b41a;border-radius:8px 8px 8px 8px;background:#f5b41a;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1 i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus i,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active .fusion-button-text,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active i{color:#ffffff;}.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:hover,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:active,.fusion-body .fusion-button.button-1:focus{border-color:#f5b41a;background:#f5b41a;}Contact Us
.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-top : 20px;margin-bottom : 20px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {padding-top : 0px !important;padding-right : 0px !important;margin-right : 2.56%;padding-bottom : 0px !important;padding-left : 0px !important;margin-left : 2.56%;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:75% !important;margin-bottom : 30px;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 2.56%;margin-left : 2.56%;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-builder-column-12{width:100% !important;}.fusion-builder-column-12 > .fusion-column-wrapper {margin-right : 1.92%;margin-left : 1.92%;}}
.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 70px;margin-top : 0px;padding-right : 30px;padding-bottom : 20px;margin-bottom : 0px;padding-left : 30px;}@media only screen and (max-width:1200px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-bottom : 32px;}}@media only screen and (max-width:640px) {.fusion-body .fusion-flex-container.fusion-builder-row-6{ padding-top : 40px;padding-bottom : 40px;}}
Go to Top