When approaching your credit union’s strategic planning session, your leadership must plan for the plan. Don’t walk cold to the even colder conference room. Be prepared with a vision and ideas to help move the credit union forward. The entire board and executive leadership team should be involved for the best outcomes.
To that end, here are three things you can do before your most successful, action-oriented credit union strategic planning session yet!
Of course, your planning session will cover your wins (and losses) from the past 12 months—but forget about that for now. Break out your crystal ball and ask yourself the most important question a credit union leader can ask: “What do I want?”
Where do you want to be at the end of next year?
How does that vision feed into a one-year goal? How does it set you up to accomplish your 5-year goal?
Answering these questions is one of the most critical steps in your strategic planning process. Give yourself the time and opportunity you need to see the future of your credit union as clearly as possible before your strategic planning event. You must first have a vision for which to plan.
Make sure your board and leadership team come to the strategic planning event prepared to participate. Before the meeting, share your high-level view of the coming year and some opportunities you see for the future. Once you’ve done that and gotten some buy-in, assign a little homework to your board members and any leaders who will be attending your event. Here are a few starter questions to get your leadership and board thinking:
No doubt about it, conducting a credit union strategic planning event is hard work, work the credit union’s leadership team should approach shoulder to shoulder. Hiring a third-party facilitator for your strategic planning event is a best practice. And by hiring, I mean paying for an experienced facilitator. Hiring a facilitator tells your board and credit union leadership, “We’re all in this together. I’m responsible for what’s working and what isn’t working, same as you are. We can all do better, including me.”
If you, as CEO, facilitate your strategic planning event, other leaders may feel compelled to agree with you, and that sense of obligation can limit the free flow of thoughts and ideas. YMC Strategic Planning facilitators know how to probe when your team is not fully bought in, dig for root causes of issues being discussed, insist on defining measurable activities and outcomes for key initiatives, and call out the elephant in the room everyone is avoiding. This focused expertise can be the difference between a superficial, inconsequential meeting and a productive planning session that aligns your team around the goals for the coming year and energizes them to tackle the key activities required to accomplish those goals.