ASPIRE to Change: Planning the Program
Posted by: Lorraine Cregar in Change Management, Leadership, tags: Change Leadership, Change Management, Governance, PMO, Program ManagementNow that you know what your destination is, you need a roadmap to get there.
The third step in The Brookside Group’s ASPIRE Change Leadership ModelTM gets you that roadmap. During the “Plan Programs” step, you define milestone goals, strategies and tactics to reach your end goals as defined in the previous step in the model. (See “Setting Goals).
Again, this might seem easier than it truly is. It is easy if you stick to general, directional plans. If you are very specific, measurable and time-bound, it isn’t nearly as easy – but your plan will be better by orders of magnitude. Stating, “Train key employees in the fourth quarter” is easy. Stating, “Train 85% of all managers and 100% of directors and above in the first two weeks of December” makes the expectations clear for all. You might not get the 85%, but your result will be far better than the first example would provide.
Likewise, your strategies, which are the basic action items to be undertaken in support of the objectives, need to be specific. For instance, just saying that you’ll use communication as a strategy during the initiative isn’t enough. You need to dig deep down to what you’ll communicate, how, when and why.
As might be obvious, measures are the standards by which the success of the strategies is quantified. The key mistake we see is tracking activities, like counting intranet articles. Your measures need to be outcome focused, allowing you to track the degree of behavioral change that’s been achieved. And if the behavioral change isn’t great enough, then your measures also need to tell you why.
One final thought on planning your program, you must establish a system of governance over the program and a method for managing the program. A governance program will provide you and your change team with information and understanding about:
- Who the program’s stakeholders are
- The roles and responsibilities of all parties
- The process for escalating issues
Some form of program management will give you the ability to:
- Track and report program milestone status, resource plans, budget, interdependencies
- Provide transparency to risks, issues, etc.
- Make unbiased, final calls on status
- Ensure actions are executed, issues assigned and addressed and key decisions made; ensuring issues, resolutions and key decisions are communicated
- Ensure consistency of ways of working, team protocols, reporting, in an effort to improve effectiveness and efficiency

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