In 23 years serving as a management advisor to companies of every size, all over the world, I have yet to encounter an organization that does not struggle with some form of “communication” challenges. Although this can impact companies from several different angles, there is one communication breakdown that has the most significant impact on the overall success of the business.
The lack of a sharply focused, easily understood and extremely well-communicated vision and strategy for growth.
In most businesses, the executive team and senior managers are constantly talking about the vision and strategy, it’s part of their meetings, it’s what they lay awake at night thinking about, but typically if you go just one or two layers down in the organization nobody has a clue about the actual meaning of the vision and how they are supposed to implement the strategy. Remember this: without a clearly communicated vision there is no way to achieve alignment across the organization, act strategically, empower fast decision-making or create a high level of accountability.
When people do not know where they’re going, it is impossible for them to get there successfully!
The key point here is, to effectively communicate the organization’s vision and strategy you must talk about them all the time, using multiple communications channels, at all levels of the organization, delivering a consistent and focused message. I once had the CEO of a company ask me, “When do you know that you have communicated the vision enough?” I replied, “When you get to point that if you have to explain it one more time… you’ll vomit… that’s when the lowest person in your organization just heard the vision for the very first time.”
The answer is simple: communicate, communicate, communicate… and then communicate some more.
Many thanks John for COMMUNICATING your message very succinctly.
Best regards
Barry.
Its always a pleasure to hear your point of view.
Thinking over my career path .The best path to take to success.
I need to charge ahead.
A life of challengers
Many thanks.
Sandra Petric
Spot on.