Analyze Competitive Positioning
The purpose of this step is to determine the current and desired competitive positioning. The business goals to
be defined in the next step will lead the organization to the desired situation. A number of techniques are applicable
here-for example, a Strengths, Weakness, Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT) analysis or Porter's competitive analysis
[POR98].
Without a clear and well-communicated business strategy, realistic business goals cannot be set, and alignment between
business goals, processes, and strategy cannot be guaranteed.
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Define Business Goals
The purpose of this step is to define what needs to be achieved in order for the organization to reach the desired
competitive position identified in the previous step. Be sure to focus on what will give the organization a competitive
advantage, because only this is strategic, as described in Technique: Business
Goal.
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Describe Measures
The purpose of this step is to define how the business goal will be measured. If you can find a quantitative measure to
assess whether or not the business goal has been achieved, the business goal probably can be related to business
activities. Try to quantify the expected outcome and record this in the change value and change kind properties of the
business goal. Because people often set more ambitious goals for themselves than others would, it is useful to discuss
the upper and lower boundaries with those responsible for achieving the business goal. Employees need to feel that
there is enough challenge in their work, but they also like to be able to give themselves an occasional pat on the
back.
If the measure is qualitative or subjective, the business goal may need to be translated to more measurable,
lower-level goals. In this case, the sub-goals are identified by considering how the higher-level goal will be
measured. Achievement of some or all of the sub-goals should result in achievement of the higher-level goal.
If a business goal has been assigned a date by which it should be achieved, it is sufficiently concrete to be called an
objective. When determining the timeframe within which the goal is to be achieved, be ambitious yet realistic.
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Structure Business Goals
The purpose of this step is to identify the relationships between higher level and lower level goals. This is the step
that will actually produce a hierarchy of business goals. Some business goals are not concrete and measurable enough to
allow you to find supporting business use cases. These are typically strategic goals that need to be defined at more
concrete levels.
Business goals must be traced from higher level to lower level to produce a business-goal hierarchy.
In the daily operations of any enterprise, there are minor localized conflicts between scoring in the short-term and
building up long-term company value. A business-goal hierarchy derived from the Business Vision ensures that the right
tradeoffs are made between short-term financial goals and less immediate, yet more important, strategic goals.
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Evaluate Your Results
The purpose of this step is to verify that the business strategy has been successfully translated into a set of
management objectives for the organization. Review the business-goals hierarchy as well as the individual business
goals to ensure that they form a complete and consistent whole. Make sure that the business goals have been translated
to the business use cases so that the activities of the business are aligned with the desired competitive position of
the organization.
Conduct a review session with management and stakeholders at different levels to ensure that the business goals support
the strategy and that business goals at different levels are unambiguous, measurable, and realistic. For help with
reviewing, see Checklist:
Business Goal.
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