Vision statements and mission statements have become virtually ubiquitous in the corporate world. That practice has spread beyond commercial firms to research organizations from as small as single technology start-ups to large national and international government-funded laboratories. Nonetheless, beyond their value as feel good slogans, these obbligato texts frequently offer little actionable guidance to top and senior management. Moreover, for the rank and file worker, these statementsâif they are even knownâconvey little meaning or sense of purpose to most employees. Why is that?
The enterprise-wide approach merges smoothly into holistic management that integrates critical strategic activities and elements of business operations into a logical whole. Within the holistic perspective, the activities that embody the execution of the corporate strategy into management of operations (tactics) and that provide assurance and accountability to stakeholders both flow top-down in a logical way from the enterprise-wide superstructure. The enterprise planning network depicts the flow of logical connections from the space of executive authority to the space of operations management as shown schematically in Figure 1.1.
The execution (operations of the organization) can be considered to be ethical when âdoing what is rightâ is also doing what is best for the organization in the long run.
Finally, top and senior management must communicate its plans internally throughout the enterprise and also externally to its most important stakeholders and customers. Those later actions imply that the comprehensive scheme of Figure 1.1 omits a second network critical to the success of the enterprise. The product-centric network focuses the enterprise identity (the Why) and its resources (the How) plus the inputs of the customers and the investors onto the products of the enterprise (the What). For a research enterprise, the research output and its outward expression are an important, and often the primary, product line. The top and senior management must never lose sight of the products of its organization. Those products are the sum of the deliverables of the enterprise.
Topics for class discussion or reader introspection: (1) What other relevant networks are there? (2) Where and how does research fit in? (3) How does the enterprise decide what research to perform?
In the Management Space, the combined efforts of the enterprise managers must put the plans formulated and promulgated by the executives into action by the entire set of employees. To assure a cost-effective deployment of corporate resources, the managers of each business unit within the enterprise need an actionable plan with a near-term (3-year) time horizon. Such a plan should derive from an audit of available employee skills and result in a staffing plan for managers to assign (or hire) appropriate employees to take on specific responsibilities and to assure that their performance fulfills the objectives of the enterprise. These human resource plans need to recognize the availability of special skills in the labor market. They must be consistent with relevant labor law and representative contracts for unionized workers. To be legal and ethical, all operations must comply with regulations promulgated by all relevant levels of government. They should respect the environment and the health and safety of the public.
No employee should lose sight that the quality of the organizationâs products determines the long-term viability of the enterprise. In the end, assuring the quality of product as well the legal and cost-effective execution of the high-level plans of the enterprise is accomplished via multiple feedback loops of information to the appropriate senior executives. The organization can operate effectively to advance the enterprise strategy crafted by top and senior management when day-to-day operations are structured in a way that flows from and is consistent with the mission, vision, and guiding values of the enterprise.
The overall assessment of enterprise performance for which the chief executive officer is ultimately responsible is a bottom-up evaluation of performance assurance that holds each employee accountable for actions within his/her sphere of influence. Assurance reports are often the product of internal and/or external auditors in which overall performance is judged against the degree to which the enterprise is functioning cost-effectively to advance its mission in compliance with policy, regulations, and relevant law.
To work effectively, managers must feel themselves accountable (and being held accountable) for activities within their respective range of control. Performance-oriented employees can become good managers when they accept personal accountability for their actions, successes, and failures. It is often said that managers fail in direct proportion to their willingness to accept socially acceptable excuses for failure or to blame the levels of management above them with the excuse that âthey made me do it.â Likewise mangers must be willing to set and enforce standards of behavior and performance for their subordinates and for themselves. One cannot expect satisfactory assurance audits unless an environment of accountability pervades the enterprise.
If mission and vision statements are the ultimate yardsticks by which the governance body of the enterprise (for example, a Board of Directors) will judge the performance of top management, those statements must be more than anodyne. For major research infrastructures, the mission should offer a concise, compelling statement of why the infrastructure exists. For a technology start-up, the mission statement might contain a compelling description of providing the flagship product of the enterprise to the customer base.
Unfortunately many organizations craft vision statements that are little more than lofty aspirations about the future; i.e., their statements are not actionable. Some vision statements are mere restatements of the mission statement in more esoteric language. For example, one prominent national laboratory proclaims, âOur vision is to solve the mysteries of matter, energy, space, and time for the benefit of all.â A taxpayer may wonder, âSince everything is either matter, energy, space, or time, what in the world is excluded from their vision? For eternity? And to what end?â Such a vision for a publicly funded institution is effectively asking for a blank check to do whatever the Laboratory Director General wants, as it does not provide stakeholders any quantitativeâor even qualitativeâcriteria on which to make judgments and decisions. Vague language does not provide sufficient clarity for serious strategic planning; a collective of secular philosophers or ascetic monks might have the same vision.
To be actionable, a vision statement should state clearly and concisely where the enterprise is going, how it will get there, and what the time horizon for getting there is. For major research infrastructures, a 20-year planning horizon is a reasonable temporal horizon. For a small start-up, a 10-year vision would be appropriate.
Topics for discussion or introspection: (1) What is the mission of your laboratory, company, or university? What is the vision that is broadcast to external stakeholders? Are these statements actionable or are they merely blanket cover for whatever the CEO or lab director wants to do this year?
(2) What are common ways in which leaders mismanage people in research organizations? What kind of damage is done by such mismanagement? Are standards of performance clearly articulated in your organization? Are excuses commonly made for failures in your laboratory, company, or university?