Encyclopedia of Leadership

(sharon) #1
Levels of Statements Flow of Statements

HOW TO USE THIS LEADERSHIP TOOL


“Requiring everyone to continually ‘nest his or her vision’ in new practices or a continuation
of the old ... can produce increased understanding of what is worth doing and what is not.”
—Alan Wilkins, DEVELOPING CORPORATE CHARACTER

If you, as a leader, don’t provide any structure, people will feel that there is no mechanism or


process through which they can contribute. If you provide too much detail and structure,


however, people will feel that “It’s a done deal,” and their contributions are not required.


Thus, we suggest this minimal level of structure for designing directional statements:


 As the leader, start by defining your givens—the minimum specifications of either con-
tent or process that you feel are essential elements of the directional statements.
 Explain and discuss your thinking with your workgroup. Then ask each member of
your workgroup to draft each level of directional statement within the agreed guide-
lines on his or her own. The table provided here will assist in this process.

SECTION 2 TOOLS FORBIG-PICTURETHINKING 49



  1. High-Level Statements
    Terms to select from:
    vision, mission, purpose,
    direction, values,
    mandate, operating
    philosophy, principles,
    charter, scope, long-
    range plan, overall goals,
    overall objectives, overall
    results, strategy, the core
    business, environmental
    scan. Colloquially, the
    big picture.

  2. Mid-Level Statements
    Terms to select from:
    objectives, short-term or
    specific goals, targets,
    expected results, key
    result or service areas,
    accomplishments, core
    processes,
    accountabilities,
    measurements, customer
    service commitments,
    outputs, improvement
    targets.

  3. Action-Level Statements
    Terms to select from:
    short-term plans, activity
    lists, critical events, tac-
    tics, roadmaps, process
    plans, next steps.


Time
Long-term,
enduring

Short-term,
update
frequently

Logic
Big
picture,
inclusive

Specific,
detailed

Commitment
Inspiring,
visionary

Action-
oriented

Amount of Detail

Connected to
External
Needs

Connected to
Organizational
Needs

Connected to
Day-to-Day
Needs
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