“Its beauty is its mechanics”… or the importance of harmonizing the
strategy and the tactics in the organizations
When I still was a boy, in Spain, a car manufacturer
made a commercial of one of their models with the slogan “its beauty
is its mechanics”.
It is obvious that the creative professionals in charge, being conscious that the rest of the attributes of the vehicle would not be perceived like beneficial – from a general point of view - by the potential customers, they used as fundamental impact of its campaign the attribute mechanics reliability; and I assure to you that they reached the goal in terms of sales.
They achieved the success because, at that time, the consumer was sensible to this
argument because, in general, the mechanical reliability of other competing
models was inferior, even equipped with more beautiful bodies and more
complete accessories.
Could have been
possible today a campaign like this?
Obviously not, because the today’s buyer takes for
granted that the mechanical reliability and the safety are guaranteed in
any vehicle; so, it is not possible to talk about that as a benefit for the
client.
In addition, the person
that is considering buying a car is looking for a balanced product
in which they may find satisfaction to its needs and expectations, among
other aspects, regarding the following attributes:
· Outer and inner
design
· Performance
· Fuel consumption
· Dynamic behavior
· Safety
· Maintenance
· Price
No vehicle survives in the market if it does not
present a suitable balance between these
aspects.
In every
organization it is also essential the right balance
In the organizations it is compulsory
the right balance, because, otherwise, they could not be sustainable if
they forget some of the fundamental aspects of the management and they are
limited to the beauty of certain elements…
But, pay attention, I am not speaking about the strategies
of differentiation- that continue being so valid, or even more, than
years ago -; I talk about the necessity to balance and to give
coherence, among others, to the following elements:
· Strategy and
Tactics
· Mission, Vision
and Values
· Policies
· Needs and expectations
of stakeholders
· Deployment of
strategic and operative plans
· Human team
If this balance fails, the organization will lack
beneficial global attributes for the stakeholders, since it will be focused, in the best one of the cases, in “the
beauty is in the tactics” - prioritizing, for instance, the control of
very basic indicators of management, but ignoring where is going to, which are
the future challenges; in definitive, walking without stopping, but without
direction and clear evaluation of risks in the route and, in the worse one of
the cases, it will finish devoured by changing inefficiencies, competitors,
conditions of market, dissatisfaction of employees, suppliers or clients, etc.
By the opposite, if it is focused in “the beauty is
in the strategy…” , but it is unable to transfer the strategy to
feasible operative plans, will be committing the error to remain in the theoretical
layer without any applied action plan, also leading to a failure in the midterm.
Is more
important Excel or PowerPoint?
Along the last years I have had the opportunity to
listen some directors affirming that “the secret of the success in these
times consists of using more Excel and less PowerPoint…”
First of all, I have to admit that sentences of
this type - and, much more, in the case of people managing companies - cause
me some concern because, even trying to make a benevolent interpretation of
the statement (supposing that the strategy, the policies, the plans and the
great lines of performance are reflected in slides and that the operative
actions, numbers and indicators are handled in spreadsheets), certainly they
reflect a clear ignorance of the reality or, as my old professor used to say, a
lack of management skills.
Or would it be possible to affirm, for example, that
in an opera the libretto is more important than the music? Or the music than
the cast? Or the libretto than the
orchestra and its musicians?
Or, coming back to the first statement of this post, could it be affirmed that
the beauty is in the mechanics…? Could it be said that a good pilot is that controls
every light in the control panel of the car, but which approaches the race
without strategy and without any revision based on the circumstances?
I am sure that most of the readers will agree: the
answer to the previous questions is negative; the key issue, in all the
previous analogies, is balance and coherence.
There is no organization who can survive without balancing
all the aspects of management, starting with
a good road to vision map: where it wants to go to, when
it wants to arrive, how it will be done, how much will it cost and who will be
the team members.
Therefore, it is essential to suitably handle all
the keys that allow to ensure the success in the long term, for which it
is necessary to start up strategies and tactics adapted, suitable and revisable
in the short and midterm, using paper, computer, spreadsheet, slides, data
bases, etc.; but mainly, and before nothing, with strategic analysis,
boldness, common sense and… a lot of luck!
The final confession…
The first car that I could buy during the late '80s – a very old second hand
one - was a fantastic Renault 4 and, yes, I must admit that its beauty was… its
mechanics!
