Does your team really understand the business reasons for this program? Are those reasons the obvious drivers for daily program activities? Does program leadership schedule activities and make key decisions based on where you will get the most value/ROI? Are you prepared to measure success?
In Part 1 of this blog series, we examined the importance of getting to the truth. In Part 2, we stressed the need to chart the critical path. In this third and final post, I’ll explain why your top business reasons (value/ROI) must be the foundation for key decisions. The fundamental question of “why are we doing this?” too frequently gets lost in the shuffle of a large-scale program. People answer with “corporate says we need to,” “it’s an IT upgrade,” or even “I have no idea,” when the true business reason is much more meaningful. By documenting the real targeted business value, rallying your employee base and your team around it, and making it core to project communications, you can create ongoing motivation and drive positive results.
There are several ways to provide clarity on your targeted program value, but I personally like to focus on three actions that have terrific impact and proactively answer the question, “Why are we doing this?”:
Most large transformation programs cost millions or tens of millions of dollars. They also have targeted value that is typically 3X to 5X the cost. So, enlisting a dedicated value champion or even a VMO (Value Management Office) is highly recommended to ensure that the targeted value is achieved. This focus alone can double the speed and amount of value achieved. The Value Champion must spend time understanding the business today and the transformation program overall, so that he/she can do the one thing that most companies hope for but don’t actively make happen:
Chart and navigate the path to value. Simply defining value is not enough. The path to value has its own obstacles and risks. Successful navigation requires
I hope you found some pearls of wisdom in this three-part blog series. Over the past 25 years, I have personally led these integrated implementations over and over again. The three words I stress to executive teams are leadership, discipline, and value. It’s easy to get caught up talking about process, technology, data, change, etc., but I urge you to keep asking each other these three questions so that percentages and green status reports don’t cover critical truths:
Asking these simple questions can be difficult, but finding the answers will be crucial to the success of your program.