Goals, strategies, and objectives explained
2 minutes 19 seconds
Do you have trouble defining and distinguishing between goals, strategies, and objectives? This article by TenStep helps will help you.
- Business Goals: TenStep does not use the term “project
goals”. Goals are set at the organization level – not the project level.
Objectives are at the project level. Goals are high-level statements that
describe what are organization is trying to focus on for the next three to five
years. They are vague (on purpose) and they are direction-setting. Because the
goal is at a high-level, it will take many projects over a long period of time
to achieve the goal. The goal should reference the business benefit in terms of
cost, speed and/or quality. (We call this "better, faster, cheaper".) Goals are vague, but not too vague. If you
can measure the achievement of your goal in one year (i.e. 25% revenue increase
by the end of the year), it is written at too low a level and is more of an
objective. If your goal is not achievable through any combination of projects,
it is probably written at too high a level (i.e. lead the industry). Perhaps it
is more of a vision.
- Business Strategies: Business goals tell you what is important.
Strategies tell you how you are going to achieve the goals. There may be many
ways to achieve your business goals. Your organization’s strategies are a
high-level set of directives that articulate how the organization will achieve
the goals, and ultimately move toward its long-term vision. Strategies are more
inwardly focused and usually try to leverage internal capabilities. Projects may be authorized that contribute
directly to the business goals, or the project may contribute to a strategy. For
example, many organizations want to get better at project management. Getting
better at project management will not directly align to a "better, faster,
cheaper" goal. It is more of a "how" so it better aligns to
strategy. Your organization could have a strategy to execute projects more
effectively and a project management initiative can align to this strategy.
- Project Objectives: Objectives are concrete statements that
describe the things the project is trying to achieve. An objective should be
written at level that it can be evaluated at the conclusion of a project to see
whether it was achieved. A well-worded objective can be Specific, Measurable,
Attainable, Realistic and Time-bound (SMART). SMART is a technique for wording
the objective. An objective does not absolutely have to be SMART to be valid. Objectives are important because they show
an agreement between the project manager and the project sponsor on the main
purpose of the project. The objectives should be written in a way that they are
understandable by all of the project stakeholders. Objectives are also valuable
since they provide alignment to organization goals and strategies. Your
organization should not authorize projects that do not tie to goals or
strategies
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