{"id":4025,"date":"1993-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1993-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-74-6-november-december-1993-the-pitfalls-of-planning\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:15:58","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:15:58","slug":"vol-74-6-november-december-1993-the-pitfalls-of-planning","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-74-6-november-december-1993-the-pitfalls-of-planning\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 74. 6 &#8211; November\/December 1993 &#8211; The Pitfalls of Planning"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">To plan or not to plan? Does it make any                     difference? Judging from the failures of planning in recent                     years, it hardly seems worthwhile. But though it is difficult                     and risky, the exercise can be highly beneficial. It forces                     people to think about the things that really matter in the                     long run, in business and in life&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> One look at the business section of a newspaper these days                     is enough to instil a hearty scepticism about planning. Here                     you read of literal cases of the best-laid plans going awry.                     Great international enterprises teeter on the brink of bankruptcy;                     multi- billion-dollar projects reel from staggering cost overruns;                     governments hack away at social programs in attempts to lighten                     monstrous debt loads. Now, obviously, no one ever planned                     to get into these messes. They planned to do just the reverse.<\/p>\n<p>Which raises the question: If the immense informational                     and intellectual resources of modern corporations and governments                     produce plans that are so far off the mark, what are the chances                     of anyone else making plans that stand a chance of being realized?                     We are not talking here about the vague proposals that pass                     for planning in our personal lives, but of systematic plans                     that are researched, reasoned out, committed to paper, and                     carried into effect. Planning of this kind does not trust                     to luck or the passage of time to deliver the desired outcome.                     It actively strives to make things happen by doing the fight                     thing at the fight time.<\/p>\n<p>There are, of course, some quite reasonable explanations                     for why so many plans never come close to meeting their objectives.                     The chief one is that we live in such dynamic times that all                     the assumptions on which plans are based may be suddenly rendered                     null and void. It might be argued that a good plan should                     be sufficiently flexible to accommodate any eventuality, but,                     as they say, you can&#8217;t think of everything. For example, who                     would have guessed that the former German Democratic Republic                     would collapse so abruptly and completely? Waste paper baskets                     throughout the new combined Germany must have been filled                     with social and economic plans that were destroyed as if by                     a lightning bolt.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, it is reasonable to assume that most formal                     plans actually do meet their goals, albeit with some inevitable                     hitches. You never hear of all the routine occasions when                     everything goes according to plan. Instead, planning is associated                     in the public mind with spectacular debacles. Misleading as                     that may be, there is much to be learned from the grand follies                     of planning by anyone thinking of taking it up a lesser scale.<\/p>\n<p>These lessons may not apply directly to all cases, but they                     at least provide some interesting insights into how the human                     mind plays tricks on itself. For, though the planning process                     might look coldly rational, the record shows that it is a                     lot more emotional than it appears. When plans go wrong for                     seemingly practical reasons, close examination will usually                     reveal that the cause lies in the human factor. Some of the                     failings may seem almost pathetically simple, but behind them                     is a complex web of flawed logic and confused psychology.<\/p>\n<p>Arguably the most common cause of plans going wrong is simple                     wishful thinking. Someone dearly wants something to happen,                     and twists his or her thinking around in such a way as to                     make it appear that their desires will indeed be fulfilled.                     Compatible facts and figures are unconsciously chosen to attest                     to the feasibility of the enterprise. It might be thought                     that only love- sick teenagers would attempt to remodel reality                     to fit their hopes and dreams, but the same is done by organizations                     of all sizes. National governments indulge in wishful thinking                     when they overestimate future revenues and underestimate expenditures,                     creating those famous deficits we hear so much about.<\/p>\n<p>Warnings against wishful thinking seem to have little effect.                     Textbooks on planning can repeat ad nauseam that pre-planning                     research must consider every possible factor. But even after                     every single angle has been explored, no one can control how                     people will interpret the available information. It is a basic                     rule of planning that no proposal should be considered unless                     it frankly states the very worst that could happen. Nevertheless,                     there is always a temptation to &#8220;accentuate the positive and                     eliminate the negative&#8221; in assessing feasibility.<\/p>\n<p>The Bay of Pigs debacle of 1961 was one of history&#8217;s most                     notorious examples of how wishful thinking plays havoc with                     the planning process. In the aftermath of the affair, President                     John F. Kennedy turned to his aide and future biographer Theodore                     Sorensen and asked: &#8220;How could everyone concerned ever have                     believed in such a plan?&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>&#8216;I think that I shall never see A plan that goes                   from A to B&#8230;&#8217;<\/h3>\n<p>The answer was clear: They believed in it because they wanted                     to believe in it. &#8220;The best and the brightest&#8221; minds in Washington                     had tailored intelligence reports to their desires, turning                     a blind eye to a long parade of negative probabilities.<\/p>\n<p>The Bay of Pigs plan exposed another Achilles&#8217; heel of planning                     in that it had mixed objectives. Kennedy and his advisors                     wanted to overthrow the Cuban government; at the same time,                     they wanted to minimize and cover up U. S. involvement in                     the invasion of that country by U.S.-trained Cuban exile troops.                     They could not do both, and they failed to do either, with                     disastrous and disgraceful consequences. The episode dramatically                     demonstrated that every plan should have one simple, unequivocal,                     overriding goal.<\/p>\n<p>The besetting weakness of large-scale planning is that it                     tries to be all things to all people. Limitations, provisos,                     exceptions and modifications are inserted into plans to satisfy                     the disparate interests that clamour for a voice in policy.                     In this way, plans are steered off on tangents from the beginning.                     The tendency of planners to strike out in all directions was                     celebrated in a parody of the old song &#8220;Trees&#8221; sung by frustrated                     World War II Canadian army officers: &#8220;I think that I shall                     never see\/ A plan that goes from A to B&#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>With every attempt to respond to diverse considerations,                     a plan takes on added rigidity. It becomes a series of &#8220;musts&#8221;                     &#8211; one must do this and must do that to keep everybody satisfied.                     Human nature does not take kindly to rigid plans: faced with                     having to do things that do not fit the prevailing conditions,                     people will find excuses not to do them. At best, they will                     do them half-heartedly.<\/p>\n<p>When it is followed to the letter, a rigid plan is likely                     to be overwhelmed by developments. This is why no plan should                     be considered complete without an accompanying contingency                     plan &#8211; &#8221; Plan B.&#8221; In itself, the original &#8220;Plan &#8220;A&#8221; should                     be capable of fairly easy adjustment to accommodate shifting                     circumstances. In particular, it should be flexible enough                     to exploit opportunities in case it meets with premature success.<\/p>\n<p>Experts advise taking plans &#8220;back to the drawing board&#8221;                     even when they appear to be progressing smoothly. A date should                     be fixed in the implementation stage at which the plan comes                     in for a searching critical review. If it then seems too complicated                     in the light of events, efforts should be made to &#8220;uncomplicate&#8221;                     it, discarding all extraneous considerations. Special interests                     must sometimes be overridden for the good of the whole.<\/p>\n<p>But if plans can be over-complicated, they can also be over-                     simplified. Some managers seem to believe that objectives                     are sufficient unto themselves. They will say something like,                     &#8220;Our goal is to increase our earnings by ten per cent, and                     I don&#8217;t care how we do it.&#8221; They must care how they do it:                     otherwise they may do things that are inimical to their long-term                     interests, such as cutting back on quality, curtailing investment                     in new technology, or taking ethical shortcuts that may come                     back to haunt them in the end.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;don&#8217;t-care-how&#8221; approach ignores the rule that a systematic                     plan must come in two parts &#8211; a strategic objective and an                     action plan. The latter specifies what steps are to be taken                     at what stage. The function of the action plan is to make                     things happen as you want them to. It also provides a measure                     at any given time of progress towards your strategic goal.<\/p>\n<p>The central planning apparatus of the former Soviet Union                     was infamous for setting objectives without spelling out how                     they should be pursued. An anecdote that went the rounds in                     Russia a few years ago illustrated the weakness of the generalized                     approach. A large shoe factory consistently exceeded the production                     quotas which the central planners set for it. Its manager                     was rewarded with a medal. Only later was it discovered that                     the shoes the plant produced were all the same size, and all                     for the left foot.<\/p>\n<p>The Soviet experience, incidentally, provides an object                     lesson in allowing ideological theories to govern planning.                     Karl Marx had written that if such-and-such was done, then                     such-and-such would follow; when it did not, the doctrinaire                     authorities pretended that it had, in the belief that events                     would inevitably conform to theory over time. Communists have                     not been alone in basing plans on doctrine instead of facts                     and probabilities; the right-wing belief that unfettered self-interest                     will benefit all concerned in the economy has similarly been                     tried and found wanting. Planning draws much of its bad reputation                     from the zeal of theoreticians. It is at its most effective                     when it is regarded as a pragmatic endeavour which does not                     try to change the world, but works with conditions as they                     are.<\/p>\n<p>Simplistic plans are usually made by people who rely on                     statistics and other second-hand information without looking                     at actual situations. In World War I, allied staff officers                     sat in chateaux in Flanders and France and drew arrows on                     maps that doomed millions of men to death or maiming in the                     bloody quagmire of the front line. The story is told of a                     British general who visited the front for the first time after                     spending months of plotting attacks on paper. When the sodden                     chaos of the battlefield came into view, he blurted out: &#8220;My                     God, did we really send men to fight in this?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Battle of Passchendaele in 1917 was one of those occasions                     when a plan took on a life of its own, independent of its                     objective. The British high command&#8217;s original aim was to                     trap and crush the German forces by launching their assault                     in conjunction with an amphibious landing behind the German                     lines. When the landing was dropped as impracticable, the                     British generals carried on with the other half of the plan                     as if nothing had been altered. In the heat of action, they                   completely lost sight of their original strategic intent.<\/p>\n<h3>The elasticity of the mind can make a success                   out of a failure<\/h3>\n<p>Not only that, but they became so personally committed to                     their truncated plan that they stubbornly clung to it when                     there was stark evidence that it was headed for disaster.                     Then they skewed the facts to convince themselves as well                     as others that it was succeeding when it was not. They insisted                     that all that was wrong with it was that not enough effort                     was being put into it. So &#8211; at the cost of scores of thousands                     of lives &#8211; they increased the manpower and mat\u00e9riel                     committed to it. It was a truly horrible example of &#8220;throwing                     good money after bad.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The lesson of Passchendaele is that if a plan is not showing                     any signs of working, it should be scrapped entirely. Trying                     save parts of it (or trying to save face on the part of its                     authors) only makes matters worse. To prevent such wrong-headedness,                     someone has to be made responsible for monitoring the progress                     of a plan &#8211; and given the authority to speak up about it when                     it is not succeeding. Too often, people within an organization                     will know that plans have gone astray but will not say anything                     about it, either because they fear it would displease their                     superiors or they do not know whom to tell.<\/p>\n<p>As Peter F. Drucker warned in his Managing for Results,                     the elasticity of the human mind can easily make a success                     out of a failure. &#8220;Three years later nobody remembers that                     a product was once expected to revolutionize the industry,                     instead of which it just barely returns its operating expenses.                     What everybody remembers is, &#8216;We started this as a minor addition                     to our product line and it is doing quite well.'&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>What the planners and their bosses did not know<\/h3>\n<p>The simple cure for self-delusion is to keep the plan front                     and centre in everyone&#8217;s mind, so that its progress or otherwise                     is &#8221; public knowledge&#8221; within an organization. No one should                     be excluded: it has been demonstrated over and over again                     that employees will not stick to a plan unless they are fully                     aware of what they are doing and why they are doing it.<\/p>\n<p>In current business jargon, employees must be persuaded                     to &#8220;buy into &#8221; the plan. One way of getting them involved                     is to ensure that their efforts in carrying it forward are                     rewarded and recognized. Another is to consult everyone concerned                     early in the process. Participating in making a plan cultivates                     a feeling of &#8220;ownership,&#8221; giving employees a psychological                     stake in carrying it out assiduously.<\/p>\n<p>Asking the people on the front line what should be done                     obviates trying to do the impractical. One case history of                     a thwarted plan tells of a company that launched production                     of a product that depended on a key component procurable from                     only one supplier. What the planners and their bosses did                     not know was that the supplier intended to cease production                     of the component. They had neglected to consult their purchasing                     people, who &#8211; having heard it on the grapevine &#8211; could have                     told them that they could not depend on the component being                     available for long.<\/p>\n<p>Not only is it imperative to consult front-line people when                     making a plan, it is imperative to keep in constant touch                     with them while it is being implemented. By discussing its                     progress with them, those in charge are better-able to see                     where it might have to be altered to respond to emerging events.<\/p>\n<p>Successful plans demand daily attention from management                     at all levels. According to Boston University business professor                     John M. Stengrevics, &#8220;plans provide the backdrop for making                     the even the most insignificant decisions. Managers should                     ask themselves: How does this decision contribute to my plan?&#8230;                     How can I use this decision to achieve my objectives?&#8221; Stengrevics                     further urges managers to &#8220;try to flesh out and develop the                     plan each time you think about it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In less eventful times, plans could safely be made on the                     basis of &#8221; more of the same.&#8221; People assumed that what was                     happening at present would continue to happen for the life                     of their programs. If the economy was booming or slumping,                     they projected a continuation of the boom or slump, making                     little or no allowance for changes in market conditions, tastes                     or technology. In today&#8217;s mercurial business environment,                     the &#8220;rolling over&#8221; of business plans can be fatal. Experts                     advise a complete reassessment of all the assumptions on which                     a business operates every time a plan is made.<\/p>\n<p>The idea that what is happening now is a permanent state                     of affairs is a fallacy &#8211; a mental error that has the deceptive                     appearance of logic. A related fallacy is the assumption that                     everyone thinks and feels the same way as oneself. Hence a                     businessman who is enthusiastic about a product will assume                     that customers will also be enthusiastic about it. He may                     learn to his regret that people do not all react the same                     way.<\/p>\n<h3>In a board room or a living room, the same rules apply<\/h3>\n<p>Mistakes like this are made when people substitute &#8220;gut feeling&#8221;                     for sound research. Intuition is wonderful thing, but it should                     have a factual foundation to hold it up. Planning cannot be                     done without making assumptions, but professionals in the                     field insist that they be &#8220;well-informed assumptions.&#8221; It                     might be thought that such thoroughness will lead to overcaution,                     but the reverse is often true: an ample flow of information                     may turn up opportunities that would otherwise have been overlooked.<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, there have been times in planning when the                     assumption that everybody thinks alike has proved to be all                     too valid. One textbook example of flawed corporate planning                     is the case, in the 1950s, of polyethylene. It seems that                     every large chemical company in the United States concluded                     simultaneously that this new product had tremendous market                     potential, so they all built expensive new plants to make                     it. The market was flooded, and their plants all ended up                     operating at half-capacity. Had those companies consulted                     their customers and suppliers, they might have learned about                     one another&#8217;s intentions, and some might have backed off from                     committing themselves.<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, research and intelligence-gathering can                     be carried too far. This is a particular peril in an age when                     so much computerized data is available that a person can keep                     consuming it indefinitely. It is quite possible to investigate                     a proposal for so long that the opportunity it is designed                     to exploit has vanished by the time a plan is ready. If some                     plans are shot down in flames, these never get off the ground.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, many plans fail simply because they are never put                     into effect. Since lenders and investors have begun calling                     for detailed business plans from independent businesses, consultants                     have noticed a tendency to &#8220;take the money and run.&#8221; Once                     the loan or investment is safely in hand, business and professional                     people will file away their plans and revert to seat-of-the-pants                     management. In large organizations, too, plans are frequently                     put aside while management scurries about dealing with the                     crises that crop up day by day.<\/p>\n<p>If all this sounds familiar, it is because much the same                     things happen to us in our personal and family affairs. Whether                     we are trying to follow a household budget, an investment                     program or a diet, we are likely to waver from our original                     intentions, to be distracted by immediate happenings, or simply                     to let matters lapse. Rigid plans can be just as disastrous                     to an individual as to an army. When personal schemes allow                     no room for manoeuvre, they are almost doomed to defeat.<\/p>\n<p>The same basic rules apply to plans whether they are made                     in a corporate board room or a suburban living room. They                     must be realistic, they must be simple and straightforward,                     they must be flexible. Every &#8220;Plan A&#8221; must be accompanied                     by a workable &#8220;Plan B&#8221; to cope with contingencies. Plans should                     be active, not passive, incorporating scheduled stages at                     which things are to be done and at which the things are made                     to happen. If these rules are not observed, all you are doing                     is indulging in elaborate daydreams.<\/p>\n<p>Even when every condition is met, however, planning remains                     a risky and trying endeavour. Thoughtful managers are keenly                     aware of all the psychological obstacles that lie in the way,                     and still their plans frequently end in ruin. Which brings                     us to the big question: given all its many pitfalls, is systematic                     planning worth the effort, expense, and wear and tear on the                     nerves?<\/p>\n<p>Well, yes. One purely pragmatic reason is that, as mentioned                     above, a growing number of independent business and professional                     people have no choice but to produce business plans if they                     hope to raise capital. They therefore might as well take their                     plans seriously and put them to use.<\/p>\n<p>But even when planning is not mandatory, it has the merit                     of focussing attention on what you really want to accomplish,                     and what you really want to do with your resources and abilities.                     Successful planning takes discipline, diligence, and self-knowledge.                     The exercise of these invigorating qualities cannot help but                     do good, whether to a massive enterprise or just an ordinary                     citizen trying to make the most of life.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[80],"class_list":["post-4025","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-80"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 74. 6 - November\/December 1993 - The Pitfalls of Planning - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-74-6-november-december-1993-the-pitfalls-of-planning\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 74. 6 - November\/December 1993 - The Pitfalls of Planning - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"To plan or not to plan? Does it make any difference? Judging from the failures of planning in recent years, it hardly seems worthwhile. But though it is difficult and risky, the exercise can be highly beneficial. 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Does it make any difference? Judging from the failures of planning in recent years, it hardly seems worthwhile. But though it is difficult and risky, the exercise can be highly beneficial. 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