All nonprofit executives recognize corporate strategy development is important. But it’s a safe assumption that most also find the creation of their organization’s strategic plan to be daunting, sometimes scary. When making decisions on the path ahead, you will cut off other possibilities and opportunities. Those choices become a reflection of you as a leader and what if they don’t pan out?
When operating with that fear, nonprofit leaders tend to turn to the past and traditional strategic planning methodology to justify their decisions. This can look like too many priorities, months of collaboration, benchmark research and citations, spreadsheets and cost projections, and pages upon pages of strategic planning documentation to validate “this is the right call.” If the goal is to make everyone feel safe, then this works. But if the goal is to build an effective, business strategy formulation, this is not a valuable use of time or donor dollars.
You’re stifling growth, innovation, and creativity when you let fear or comfort drive.
You can streamline the creation of a meaningful strategic plan without losing substance. A few rules to remember when embarking on this strategic planning process:
Out of hundreds of nonprofit clients I’ve partnered with, I can only remember one leader expressing they had the luxury of time to ponder, conduct market research, and consult with several of their trusted peers in the sector. They happened to be a retired board chair of an organization raising more than $100MM in annual revenue. For most nonprofit leaders, you need results. And fast.
That’s where a one-page strategic plan comes in. It’s a 30,000-foot view of your priorities, objectives, and direction. It quite literally gets everyone on the same page. It’s deceptively simple, but it forces you to get to the heart of what you’re trying to achieve.
Purpose - Why do we exist? What purpose do we serve? This is not your probably-too-wordy mission statement. Define a practical purpose that is unlikely to dramatically change when you review it in a year or two. Here’s an example in practice:
Guiding policies - How do we realize our purpose? Think about what’s possible for you in the next 1-3 years. Your policies need to be instilled with the same DNA as the purpose. Let’s keep the moon landing example going:
In absence of step-by-step instruction documented across dozens or hundreds of pages, your purpose and guiding policies will empower teammates at all levels of your organization to use them as an ever present filter when making decisions (what you hired them for!). Brevity gets the crown when it comes to communicating an overarching strategy to teammates at all levels.
There’s a place for complex, in-depth documentation and research, but not when it comes to your strategic planning routine. You may need to practice sitting with the tension of your decisions, but recognize if you’ve got a plan built upon strengths and necessary context from your peers, you’re on the right track.
After you’ve defined your purpose and guiding policies, use a structured discussion to surface and solve for the greatest challenges your organization might face in realizing its purpose. Check out our Problem-Solving Framework, an inclusive exercise to help you and your team get to “yes.”
Solve big problems and make tough decisions in less time
There are a few more components that should be featured on your one-page strategic plan, like your primary strategic plans for growth, high-impact campaigns throughout the year, and key content themes that will resonate most with your audience(s) and align with your purpose. We’ll cover these in future articles, but today’s key takeaway is that a one-page strategic plan will take your team further faster.
Subscribe to the Switchboard, CauseMic’s newsletter for more insights on effective strategic planning. On average, we deliver a couple emails each month - always crafted with the purpose of helping social impact leaders quickly grow their organization.