focus

Close to Home: Focusing Behaviors for Family Business Planning and Protection

Family-owned businesses are the backbone of the American economy. They account for 64 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product, generate 62 percent of the country’s employment, and account for 78 percent of all new job creation. When family businesses are successful, so is our economy.      

Research shows that a family business increases its odds of being successful when it has a written business plan. 

Although the importance of a written plan is common knowledge, it’s often not common practice. 

A business plan not only helps insure the financial viability of the family business—but perhaps more importantly—protects the family relationships.  

Family relationships are protected by a business plan for several reasons: 

  • First, the creation of the plan necessitates open communication between family members and provides a forum for frustrations to be shared.

  • Second, the plan creates a shared path forward so expectations for the business are in alignment.

  • Lastly, the plan contains metrics and accountabilities, so family members have quantifiable measures to evaluate performance, which helps remove some of the emotion involved in discussing results.

That all said, true leadership and advancement occurs in the everyday actions (and reactions) of the people within an organization. The behaviors, habits, and examples set forth by leaders drive, influence, and reinforce what is expected of employees. 

This can be even further amplified—and—complicated when you mix in the familial ties, where a blend of different expectations and comfort levels can exist. 

So what can the family enterprise do to help influence the desired behaviors of their teams, and keep everyone moving in the same direction? It starts (and never ends) with a commitment to focus.

Planning Before Action

In the first article in this series, we talked about the three essential steps in the business planning process: Create Clarity, Focus Behaviors and Measure Results. 

The first step, Creating Clarity, involves the definition of mission, vision and values. This critical first step establishes a foundation for the business plan.

It’s key that everyone in the family and on the management team know the core values and purpose of the organization, and are in agreement on what they’re building. Many plans fail because the authors skip over this initial work deeming it less important than the action oriented parts of the plan.

The clarity that is created in step one is what drives the next step, which is Focusing Behaviors.

Focusing Behaviors is critical to the implementation of a business plan because it helps to guide the day-to-day decisions that individuals make about how to spend their time. The discipline that is necessary for successful plan implementation comes from getting this part of the planning process right.  

Balance Before Behavior

Focusing Behaviors starts by identifying the high level strategies that will get the business to the next level, then determining what work fulfills those strategies, and finally establishing the corresponding metrics that support the strategies.

The first part of Focusing Behaviors—identifying the strategies that will get the business to the next level—can be found by answering the question, “How will we build this business over time?” The answers to this question should be high level, future oriented, and directional as they’ll guide the creation of subsequent sections of the plan.  

The concept of the Balanced Scorecard is a useful approach for developing your strategies.

The Balanced Scorecard framework instructs you to look at your company from a variety of a perspectives, including financial, customer, internal processes and learning and growth of the team. This approach helps companies produce a balanced plan that’s not too heavily focused on one particular area such as sales or finance. 

Once you’ve answered the question, “How will we build this business over time?” and generated a list of high level strategies, the next question is “based on those strategies, what are the important projects or initiatives that will take the business to the next level?

Defining Your Game Changers

The key to connecting strategy to execution is identifying and implementing game-changing initiatives. These are usually projects that have a beginning and an end, rather than on-going activities that are part of the regular operations.

Ironically most businesses can operate day-to-day just fine without implementing game changers, but they will not be building capacity for sustainable future growth.

Unfortunately, everyday chaos often pulls individuals away from accomplishing higher level, game-changing initiatives. Many business owners have been successful because of their ability to live in this chaotic state, but chances are they can’t maintain that pace over the long run without causing harm to themselves, their family and their team.

The ability to implement new projects is dependent on conducting an honest assessment of what to stop doing in order to free up capacity.  

Once the game changers have been identified, the hard work begins: prioritizing the timing of their implementation. There usually is no shortage of good ideas for what needs to get done in a business. You can do it all, but you can’t do it all at once!

Once the next year's worth of projects have been prioritized by quarter, the next step is creating project plans for each of the initiatives. A good project plan assigns target dates for each incremental step of the project to be completed and clearly identifies the individuals who are responsible for hitting those milestones.

Well-defined project timelines and clear assignment of responsibilities avoids finger pointing and misaligned expectations later.

Clarifying Roles

Identifying the important work that needs to get done also provides an opportunity to re-evaluate the roles and responsibilities of family members.  

Family members often end up working in roles more out of happenstance than as part of a deliberate plan. When a key position needs to be filled, a family member steps in. The planning process provides an opportunity to look at whether family members are in a role that they’re best suited for or one that happened by default.

Personal assessments are helpful tools that can be used to guide this analysis. Assessments can shed light on how individuals naturally solve problems, what motivates them, how they respond to rules, and perhaps most importantly, their communication preferences.  

Although an advantage of family businesses is the flexibility of family members to fill in where help is needed, it’s also a waste of resources for them to be in roles that don’t capitalize on their natural abilities over a long period of time.

Now you’ve identified your high level strategies, determined the game changing projects that will take your business to the next level, and created implementation timelines.  

However, in order to successfully execute your plan and see changes in your business, there must be a way to evaluate whether or not people are focusing on the implementation of the plan and changing habits that will produced the desired outcomes. 

Leading by The Moment; Moving by The Metrics

This part of the plan looks to measure those activities that need to happen consistently over time.

Ask yourself: “What are the activities, or the day-to-day habits, that need to change, in order for the plan to be successful and what are the indicators that will reveal progress?”  

Challenge yourself to think beyond the usual business metrics. Consider activities or habits related to building a sense of team, encouraging innovation, improving communication, or building better relationships with key vendors.  

Key metrics could be leading indicators, such as number of meetings with potential new customers, or they could be lagging indicators such as on-time deliveries. Again, you can use the framework of the Balanced Scorecard to prompt your discussions in this area. 

Focusing behaviors in a family business can be challenging. Relationships are hard enough in business, but when disagreements about performance occur in family businesses, the impact inside and outside of the company can be devastating.    

Creating a business plan which Focuses Behaviors in a family business produces a feeling of direction and purposefulness for family members. Identifying the high level strategies, prioritizing projects and figuring out what to measure, gives everyone on the team a sense of confidence because they can see the path forward and what it will take to get there.  

 

This is the second article in a three-part series. View the first article: Close to Home: Clarity, Focus and Results for the Family Enterprise and the third article: Close to Home: The Measurement Imperative in Family Business Planning.

Focusing Behaviors Is All About Decision Making

You’ve heard the saying, “if you want different results, you need to have different behaviors.” But how do you make that happen?  If you ask most people they will tell you they struggle with focus because at any given time there are a multitude of things they could or should be doing.  Adding to the challenge is that all of these things are often important.  

One of the best ways to focus behaviors is to create a business plan.  That may sound counter intuitive to people who think of a business plan as guiding future decisions.  In reality, a well written business plan helps guide day-to-day decisions now, by providing a roadmap for where you’re headed.  Your life today (business and personal) is the sum total of all of your choices up until now.  There will never be enough time to get all the possible ‘important things’ done, so it’s critical to make sure you’re choosing the right ones.

This post is #3 in a series of 4 specific to the GG one process. View the full series: 

Are You Frustrated by a Lack of Clarity and Focus?

Do you have a clear picture of where you want to take your business but it’s ‘inside your head’? A common desire for all business owners is clarity and focus in planning whether starting from scratch or dusting off an existing plan.  

Some questions you can ask yourself to gain clarity include:  

  • Why does this business exist?

  • How do we behave (core values)?

  • How do I define success?

  • What’s most important right now?

Write down the answers to these questions and revisit them over the period of a few days.  Then share and discuss the document with your leadership team.  Ask them if your description matches your actions and if their perception of what you’re building is different.

Creating clarity means that you know where you’re headed and not being taken to some accidental place like a leaf carried by water in a stream.  There’s a great quote by Lily Tomlin where she said:  “I always wanted to be somebody, but I should have been more specific.”  Every day we’re creating something, either by accident or on purpose.  Having clarity about what you’re creating will guide your decisions and help you prioritize your next steps.

This post is #2 in a series of 4 specific to the GG one process. View the full series: 

Staying Focused on What’s Important

Photo by Elena Taranenko on Unsplash

Photo by Elena Taranenko on Unsplash

So you’ve figured out the three most important areas to your business this year, but now how do you stay focused on them? Ideally those themes are incorporated in your business planning for the year, but if you don’t have a written business plan, there are some simple ways you can keep these concepts front and center.

First, you can incorporate them into your regular, on-going communication with your team. As an example, your weekly or monthly ‘state of the company’ can include an update on progress made relative to the top three priorities.

Second, your management team meetings can include time for a monthly ‘gut check’ where the group challenges your commitment to those areas. As an example, if you’ve stated that improving employee morale is a priority, but you’re not allocating additional resources in this area, how is that going to happen?

And third, you can use those top three priorities to guide individual performance management plans. If the areas of focus are important to the company, everyone should be focused on them and looking at what role they can play in advancing them.

Figuring Out What’s Important

Photo by Paul Skorupskas on Unsplash

Photo by Paul Skorupskas on Unsplash

If someone asked you what the three most important things are you need to be focused on this year, would you know? What do you think your managers would say if you asked them the same question?

Most people can identify what is important generally in their business; profitability, customer service, employee morale, etc. But to really make big strides in our businesses, we need to be clear on which areas for change will provide greater leverage--will yield bigger results. Unfortunately the sheer volume of work that most people manage on a day to day basis can make it a struggle to identify those big picture initiatives.

To gain clarity on what’s most important to your business right now; your two biggest sources of information are your customers and your employees. If you don’t have clarity on your three most important areas or initiatives, consider a 30-day plan of reaching out to both employees and customers to solicit their input on how they think you’re doing as an organization, and where they see potential for improvement. Figuring out what’s most important is the first step in directing resources in your organization to where they will produce the biggest results.