Managers and Leaders

Interdepartmental Planning Process

Interdepartmental Planning Process

As companies grow and organize into departments, it’s common for them to fall into a siloed mentality where they only see the needs in front of them and do not consider the needs of the company as a whole. This leads to challenges with planning and knowing how best to allocate resources. The Interdepartmental Planning Process helps leaders overcome those challenges by providing a means to weigh the needs of their departments against the other needs of the company. In this way, leaders from various departments can come to a consensus about what needs to be prioritized for the benefit of the organization.

Enterprise Thinking: The antidote to department silos

Enterprise Thinking: The antidote to department silos

This natural tendency to focus on the immediate needs of one’s department can work against the success of the enterprise. Due to daily challenges, needs, and opportunities, departments can become self-focused and lose sight of the big picture. The outcomes of this silo mentality are a lack of cooperation and hoarding of information. What works for one department might make things difficult for another. Departments begin to compete for resources without understanding or even caring about the needs of the enterprise.

Stage 7 challenge: adapting to a rapidly changing marketplace

Stage 7 challenge: adapting to a rapidly changing marketplace

Known as the Visionary Stage, one of the top five challenges Stage 7 businesses struggle with is a marketplace that is rapidly changing. With between 161-350 employees, the business has grown to a point where it is no longer quick and nimble like it was when it was smaller. To remain competitive, the organization must be able to methodically identify and pursue market opportunities.

Inadequate sales are a common challenge for Stage 5 businesses

Inadequate sales are a common challenge for Stage 5 businesses

A Stage 5 business has between 58-95 employees. Known as the Integration Stage, one of the top five challenges businesses of this size face is inadequate sales. A big reason why increased sales are so important at this Stage is the need to cover growing organizational expenses. The company can no longer expect to keep growing through word-of-mouth and must establish Business Development strategies and structures that are repeatable and can scale with the organization.

Are one-on-one meetings worth the effort?

Are one-on-one meetings worth the effort?

Most people recognize that there are benefits to holding one-on-one meetings with employees. Even so, it’s not easy to make time for them given all the demands of day-to-day work that go along with running a business.

When business owners and leaders understand the true value of these meetings, though, it’s hard to deny that they might be one of the most important things they can do for the long-term health of their business.