Getting Things Done

(Nora) #1
CHAPTER 3 | GETTING PROJECTS CREATIVELY UNDER WAY: THE FIVE PHASES OF PLANNING

Have you gotten all possible ideas out on the table—
everything you need to take into consideration that might affect
the outcome?
Have you identified the mission-critical components, key
milestones, and deliverables?
Have you defined all the aspects of the project that could be
moved on right now, what the next action is for each part, and
who's responsible for what?
If you're like most people I interact with in a coaching or
consulting capacity, the collective answer to these questions is,
probably not. There are likely to be at least some components of
the natural planning model that you haven't implemented.
In some of my seminars I get participants to actually plan a
current strategic project that uses this model. In only a few minutes
they walk themselves through all five phases, and usually end up
being amazed at how much progress they've made compared with
what they have tried to do in the past. One gentleman came up
afterward and told me, "I don't know whether I should thank you or
be angry. I just finished a business plan I've been telling myself
would take months, and now I have no excuses for not doing it!"
You can try it for yourself right now if you like. Choose one
project that is new or stuck or that could simply use some
improvement. Think of your purpose. Think of what a successful
outcome would look like: where would you be physically, finan-
cially, in terms of reputation, or whatever? Brainstorm potential
steps. Organize your ideas. Decide on the next actions. Are you
any clearer about where you want to go and how to get there?


The Unnatural Planning Model


To emphasize the importance of utilizing the natural planning
model for the more complex things we're involved with, let's con-
trast it with the more "normal" model used in most
environments—
what I call unnatural planning.

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