Planning Fundamentals 2: All Business Plans are Wrong, But Vital

(I posted most of this in 2007, but it’s even more important now)

Business plans are always wrong. That’s because we’re human. Business plans predict the future. We humans are dismally inaccurate when predicting the future. Istock_000000549056small_2

Paradox: nonetheless, planning is vital. Planning means starting with the plan and then tracking, reviewing progress, watching plan vs. actual results, correcting the course without losing sight of the long-term destination. Planning is a process, like walking or steering, that involves constant corrections.

  • The plan sets a marker. Without it we can’t track how we were wrong, in what direction, and when, and with what assumptions.
  • Use this marker to manage the constant conflict between short-term problems and long-term goals. You don’t just implement a plan, no matter what. You work that plan. Use it to maintain your vision of progress towards the horizon, while dealing with the everyday problems, putting out fires.
  • So the plan may be wrong, but the planning process is vital.

The truth is that forecasting is hard. Nobody likes forecasting. But Istock_000000408066smallone thing harder than forecasting is trying to run a business without a forecast. A business plan is normally full of holes, but you fill them, after the fact, with the management that follows. That’s what turns planning into management.

Good planning is nine parts implementation for every one part strategy.

(Photo credits: istockphoto.com)

Comments

  • Planning Fundamentals 4: Its About Accountability says:

    […] an eye for how they’re changing over time. Part one was Form Follows Function. Part 2 was All Business Plans are Wrong. Part 3 was Cash Not […]

  • Planning Fundamentals 5: Planning Is To Manage Change says:

    […] an eye for how they’re changing over time. Part one was Form Follows Function. Part two was All Business Plans are Wrong. Part three was Cash Not Profits. Part four was Planning as […]

  • Planos de negócios estão todos errados | Saia do Lugar says:

    […] A dica de hoje foi dada por Tim Berry no blog Planning Startup Stories […]

  • Planning Fundamentals 3: You Think in Profits, but You Live on Cash says:

    […] in Business Management, Business Planning, Planning Fundamentals (Note: This is part 3 of my planning fundamentals review. Here are the links to Part 1: Form Follows Function and Part 2: All Business Plans are Wrong.) […]

Leave a Reply to Planning Fundamentals 5: Planning Is To Manage Change Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *