As with many aspects of the CDO role, being able to hold a creative tension between strategy and execution is a distinctive quality.
The role requires you to do both
to see far ahead, and determine how to get where you're goingand, to take one step at a time on the path you've set, without getting distracted or discouraged.Or, to put it differently, it's about altitudes of thinking
taking the time to stand on higher ground to get the long viewwhilst knowing that things are put into action back at ground levelIn part 1 of this conversation we talk about the first part — the need to build a delivery strategy and how you might go about doing that.
We start by asking the big 'why?' question — why do you even need a delivery strategy in the first place? — which is actually two questions:
Why are we doing what we’re doing?Where do we want to be in 6/12/24/whatever months, and why?We then spend a while milking a powerful but progressively more tenuous metaphor:
Walk up the hill to see the horizon
At ground level, things can appear quite suddenly and erratically, almost as if out of nowhere. That'll cause you big problems, as if you're always putting in effort just to stand still. And it's because your view is too short — the horizon is very close, where things can hit you without much warning.
You need to get to higher ground where the horizon is further out and your view is both longer and broader, taking in the landscape all around you.
Keep focused on the end-goal, on the outcome you wantTake account of what's immovable in betweenEvaluate what's moving, and understand the risk it poses on your pathChoose the optimum route to get to that destinationWork out a plan for the journey you're going to takeTest that plan as thoroughly as you can, so you're not unduly surprisedBreak the whole thing down into achievable stepsWork out how you're going to know how you're getting on when your vision isn't as clear, when things get toughPut in place the team and the equipment you'll need along the wayHow do you get going? What does a delivery strategy look like?
In the second half of the show we talk more about how you can build a strategy, and some of what you should be including in your strategy.
We talk about important elements, like …
Problem sourcingA methodical practice for identifying problems in the business, proposing solutions, and determining prioritiesProcessesThe systems needed for what should be done at different stages of the organisational lifecycleTools and methodsThe right practices of the right kind for the specific configuration and context of your teamWays of workingWhat is the operating model for your team to work together, to achieve consistency and quality?Documenting all the thingsCreating the map for the journey you're going to be takingMetricsUnderstand the progress you're making — what gets measured gets managed