Thinking about an organization’s strategy starting from its purpose.

In recent years, I have participated in defining the strategy of various organizations: an audiovisual cluster, a chemical cluster, a research institute, a public company, different businesses… and recently also an engineering college.

I was thinking about what I could share regarding the definition of the strategy of organizations that do not depend on a single person, the owner, the executive, or the entrepreneur, but rather on a collective.

One of the elements to consider in defining the strategy of these types of organizations is the importance of the narrative: in my view, building a strategy shared by the collective involves carefully listening to the different elements of the collective and putting words to the organization’s song, crafting a story about what the organization is and what it aspires to be, and what its role is towards the collective and society as a whole.

In this same line, once we have the organization’s narrative, its song, it is fundamental to identify its purpose, which is the reason why it must continue operating in its environment, what society and the planet would lose if the organization disappears. The purpose, to me, is more about the organization’s life meaning, it is the organization itself that defines it, and it is not the same as the organization’s mission, which is the meaning given to the organization by the elements that constitute it. In the end, it’s about observing what life gives you to offer what life asks of you, and the purpose would have to do with what life asks of you.

The traditional structure of strategic planning includes an internal analysis (who we are, what we want, with whom we can have it, and how) and an external analysis (political, economic, social, technological, ecological, and legal factors that affect or can affect the organization’s activity, among others). These internal and external analyses are usually summarized in a SWOT diagram (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) of the organization, and from there the mission, vision, and objectives of the organization for the next period, usually about 3-4 years, are defined.

In a highly changing environment like the one in which organizations usually operate, one might think that it makes less and less sense to define and specify what the organization will do in the next 3-4 years, since in most sectors the level of change is too high to maintain the same organizational trajectory for so long. In my experience, it makes a lot of sense to do the internal and external analysis and detailed definition of the purpose, mission, vision, objectives, and other elements at least once every 10-12 years because this contributes to creating a narrative about who the organization is and what it wants to do, as a general approach, and to reach consensus among the different agents on this approach.

However, once this is done, it can be observed that the purpose of the organization is practically the only thing that does not change. That is why, as part of the strategy and thinking about shorter-term planning, I like to represent the organization’s business model canvas, how it is now, and the business model canvas of how it can evolve in the next period, to pull it in that direction. With this tool, one can organize and imagine where the organization can evolve and establish objectives and key expected results that lead the organization to be what it is called to be.

Doing an annual review of the canvas and a proposal of what should change constitutes a short-term strategic planning model that I believe allows organizations to adapt much better to the intrinsic instability of the times we live in. The simplicity of the model makes it much easier to convey what is important for the next period to all involved, allowing them to align much better with the organization and pull together in unison in the same direction.

Mariona 2.0

Little by little we are putting together the pieces of this new professional stage of mine. After 4 years as managing director of the Institut d’Innovació Empresarial de les Illes Balears, IDI, the regional development agency of the Balearic Islands, I return to my work as a freelance consultant in innovation management.

In the previous stage, I worked as a freelancer under the name InnoBalears, and the posts before this one (you will see posts from 2005!) correspond to that stage.

Between 2019 and 2023, I wrote on the IDI blog, the company I ran, and now I once again choose this format as a way to disseminate the reflections that arise from my work, in case they inspire or serve, and also to make them more present.

I begin this new stage with enthusiasm, commitment, joy of life and a lot of work, really!

I made the decision to open this new freelance phase after a process of reflection on how I wanted to live the next few years and how could I contribute in the best possible way to the society I would like to create: a sustainable society, which makes the most of the capacity of individual and collective thinking and love towards ourselves, towards those we love and towards all beings, to make decisions.

On this website you can see a little what type of projects I have done and from where, I hope it helps you. My plans for the next few years include continuing to identify and incorporate new innovation management tools and models, working on interesting topics with incredible people, promoting the blue economy, being a digital nomad, contributing to the change I want and continuing to walk with my mind on march and open heart.

You know, with me there is always time for an infusion, a coffee, a beer or whatever you have to share what you have at hand: a project, a dream, an idea, a vision or a problem.

I hope we are lucky.

Topic of the week – Dream Society

Basing on a comment heard from one of the most important investigators in Spain I discovered Rolf Jensen and his Dream Society. The comment was a question: how are the touristic sectors innovating? Traditionally, in industrial sectors, innovation is the result of more or less clever ideas perfectioned by hours of problem solving. It’s about things, so it’s more or less easy: just a matter of time.

What happens in touristic sectors? The type of product we have is about people’s feelings, their emotions, so it is not a matter of time any more, it is about creating new emotions, at that precise moment, through not so direct means (no mahines, no screw-drivers, no computers neither schemas, only people interacting at last).

I read something about Dream Society and my friend Bel Llodrà gave me the reference on Rolf Jensen (www.dreamcompany.dk), the ideologist. I thought I had discovered the panazea of what I had thought till that moment, the maximum component. I read the articles coming up the web page and I read The Dream Society (1999), the book.

The main thesis Jensen presents is that people historically have passed through several phases of needs coverance: hunters and gatherers, agriculture implementation, industrial revolution, society information. What is next, he says (and I agree), is the Dream society, the society where people will be ready to pay more for an emotion than for a determined technology asset. Jensen describes many examples, but one of the most clear to me is the one that speaks of watches: currently all watches are ready to perform perfectly their function in an accurate mode, but one can find a wide variety of prices to perform the same function (tell you what time it is).

He applies this theory to marketing areas, and here we get to the point: industrial revolution or information society have had an enormous impact in the world, and I think the impact Jensen describes is not the impact of a world-wide dimension (as the other historical changes were).

I think the impact of the Dream Society (maybe we should call it the emotion society) will be world-wide, and people will be willing to pay less for technology and more for feelings and emotions than they have ever been. Technology is suppoused to go through, and, from some time ago on, people will want to hear the story behind.

Let’s apply this vision on tourism. We have seen a big change on tourism demands in the last years that has had a big impact on traditional mass tourism destinations. Now that we have realised that what people want to buy are emotions, we will have to change the operations side of the business in order to provide emotions. This is (for example):

  • Telling stories instead of presenting products in the marketing side
  • Asking what type of emotion is the customer feeling when he or she gets our service
  • Changing the satisfaction survey questions (if you look at them you will realise thay are all about functionality (is it clean?), not about feelings (how did you feel when you got in the room: dark?, sad?, nervous?, happy?,…)
  • Training the company people in order to be able to tell stories themselves about who the company is

I think this would be a good beginning for a lasting and loving customer- company relationship and an excellent way to identify and understand how can touristic companies innovate to improve their competition position in the market.