To help organizations maintain stability and profitability, they need to engage in some form of strategic planning. A recent survey by Travelers, an insurance giant, drives home this point.
In its 2024 CFO Study: A Travelers Special Report, the insurer surveyed 610 chief financial officers (CFOs) from organizations with 500 or more employees in various industries. One of the questions posed was: What are the most valuable skills needed by today’s CFOs?
One might assume their answers would relate to being able to crunch numbers or understand complex regulations. But the top skill, coming from 62% of respondents, was “Strategic planning for future organizational success and resiliency.”
Five Critical Skills
Along with being somewhat surprising, the survey result begs the question: Which leadership skills, specifically, are essential to strategic planning? Among the five most important are the ability to:
1. View The Organization Realistically & Aspirationally. Strategic planning starts with a grounded view of where the organization currently stands and a shared vision for where it should go. You and your leadership team need accurate information, including properly prepared financial statements, tax returns, and sales reports to establish a common perception of the state of the organization. And from there, you need to be able to reach a mutually agreed-upon vision for the future.
2. Analyze The Industry, The Market, & Foresee Impending Changes. Everyone should be up to speed on the state of your industry and market from the pertinent perspective. Your CFO, for example, needs to be able to report on key performance indicators that place your organization’s financial status in the context of industry averages and explain how those metrics compare to competitors in your market.
What’s more, everyone needs to develop the ability to make reasonable, fact-based predictions on where the industry and market are headed. Not every prediction will come true, but you’ve got to be able to forecast effectively as a team.
3. Understand Customers & Anticipate Their Needs. Again, from every member’s distinctive perspective, your leadership team needs to know who your customers truly are. This is where your marketing executive can come into play, detailing the key features and demographics of those who buy your products or services.
Then you’ve got to put in the teamwork to determine what your customers want now and, even more important, what they will want in the future. That latter point is perhaps the biggest challenge of strategic planning.
4. Recognize The Capabilities & Resources Of The Organization. Your organization can operate only within realistic limits. These include the size of its workforce, the skill level of employees, and the availability of resources such as liquidity, physical assets, and up-to-date technology.
Every member of your leadership team needs to be on the same page about what your organization can realistically do before you decide where you can realistically go. Having a balanced collective of voices — financial, operational, and technological — is critical.
5. Communicate Effectively. Many organizations struggle with strategic planning, not because of a shortage of ideas, but because of a failure to communicate. Leaders who tend to “silo” themselves and the knowledge of their respective departments can be particularly inhibitive. There are also those whose behavior or communication style is simply counterproductive. Continually work on improving how you and your leadership team communicate.
Confident Growth
So, does your leadership team have all the requisite skills to succeed at strategic planning? If not, there are certainly ways to upskill your key players through training and performance management. We can help your organization gather the financial information it needs to plan for the future confidently and decisively. Contact us.