Frame Issue Tree
Frame Issue Tree
“
strategy journey
Clearly define the boundaries and What are the boundaries of the solution
constraints space?
Get insight into the context and Do you understand key stakeholders and
decision-makers decision-makers?
Choos
e How do you plan the strategy journey to
Involve management throughout the
ensure that you focus on the right areas
process
and build broad conviction along the way?
Why are you seeking to revisit your strategy? Internal factors? External factors?
What is your strategic starting point and What specific challenges and opportunities do you need a strategy for?
challenge?
How does the stakeholder group make final decisions about which strategy to pursue and what are the
criteria (financial, feasibility, organizational, risk)?
Initial assessment: What are your “where to compete” decisions (e.g. on geographic options, customer
segments, products, channels, value chain position)?
Initial assessment: What are your “how to compete” decisions (e.g. on value proposition, business
What is the set of strategic decisions model, M&A)?
underlying your challenge and how do
Initial assessment: What are your “when to compete” decisions (e.g. on balance of horizons, staging of
you make final decisions?
moves, exercise of options)?
What other decisions does your strategic challenge give rise to?
For each of the strategic decisions what are the potential sets of solutions?
What are your first hypotheses on
Frame solutions and what are your underlying For each of your potential solutions what are your underlying assumptions?
biases?
Are your underlying assumptions backed by facts or do they need to be confirmed?
Based on context (capital constraints, owners/managers decisions, etc.) what strategic solutions are out
of scope?
Who are the real stakeholders/decision-makers and what are their internal relations?
Do you understand key
What is important for each stakeholder/decision-maker and what motivates them?
stakeholder/decision-makers?
How do they each want to be involved and what is their availability?
How do you plan the strategy journey Which are the most important parts of your strategy journey and what analytical work will you need to
to ensure that you focus on the right conduct on each part?
areas and build broad conviction along What mix of interactions should you schedule to ensure all stakeholders have the chance to grapple with
the way? and debate insights and decisions along the way?
What is your strategic starting point and 2 Frame workshop – Help your clients identify their challenge and Frame their Decisions
challenge?
3 Power Curve – Value creation is far from democratic. See how your client has fared against the top 3000
global non-financial and non-public companies and track their trajectory to ground your discussion
4 The strategy table – Organize your strategic options, make them easy to review at a glance. Refine your table
throughout the strategy journey
What is the set of strategic decisions 5 Decision criteria – Propose and agree on criteria that will support and frame the decision-making process
underlying your challenge and how do you throughout the strategy journey
make final decisions? 6 Decision pyramid – Assess the nature of the decisions that need to be made – and focus on the most
strategic ones
7 Decision cycle – Rank your decisions by frequency of occurrence or required level of commitment
8 Strategy on a page – Develop your first week’s hypotheses to set the scene for debate
9 6 key sources of bias – Check against these biases and errors that we can be unaware of
What are your first hypotheses on
Frame solutions and what are your underlying 10 Bias iceberg – Surface and debate fundamental beliefs
Frame biases?
11 Advanced key assumption check– Being aware of your assumptions is vital to avoiding decision bias. Have
your key stakeholders identify and debate their assumptions
12 Ten Test Walkthrough – This provocative full-day workshop will reshape the way your clients think about their
strategy
What boundaries define the solution?
13 Ten Tests 2-pager – Quick guide to the Ten Tests
14 Strategy interview guide – Conduct interviews with the key stakeholders in order to get insight into the context
Do you understand key and decision-makers
stakeholder/decision makers?
15 Pre-Mortem – Run this quick workshop to uncover subtle obstacles and challenges – and define ways to
overcome them early on
Learn
more? – 16 Engagement principles – 4 principles to help your stakeholder interaction flow from the start
Read the
full manual 17 Strategy Development Walkthrough – This one day workshop takes your client on a journey through the full
“Frame your How do you plan the strategy journey to strategy creation process
decisions” ensure that you focus on the right areas
and build broad conviction along the way? 18 Interaction formats – Set up stakeholder interactions to optimize the participants’ benefits and engagement
in #788839
(10 min)
19 Make my work plan – Set up your strategy work plan quickly with “My Workplan” (workplan generator link to
come)
2 Frame workshop – Help your clients identify their challenge and Frame their Decisions
What is your strategic starting
point and challenge?
3 Power Curve – Value creation is far from democratic. Ground your debate in a fact-based
view, pitching your client’s performance against 3,000 top global companies
Learn
more? – Do you understand key
stakeholder/decision makers?
Read the
full manual
“Frame your
decisions”
in #788839 How do you plan the strategy journey to
(10 min) ensure that you focus on the right areas
and build broad conviction along the way?
▪ The client was investigating a growth opportunity involving the creation of an online business. It would
Situation require significant resource investment, but with high returns. The members of the strategy team could
already see that demonstrating the channel’s potential to the top team would be rather straightforward
▪ Framing insight (1): Early identification of key risks and hurdles to execution
So they – The team saw a serious risk of cannibalization for one of the company’s existing businesses
stepped
– The new venture would also require substantial funding over the next 3 to 5 years
back and
looked
▪ Framing insight (2): Identifying the most important building block
at the – The team recognized that it would be critical to invest a disproportionate amount of time and effort to
big the Commit building block rather than steaming ahead with an analytic effort. So they developed a
picture powerful multimedia concept prototype representing key support functions to capture the imaginations
of the top team and the executives
▪ The prototype convinced leadership – including heads of Finance and IT – that the concept was
compelling for consumers. And that if the company didn’t make a move, a competitor would
▪ The channel launched it in record time, to promising early results in both customer acquisition and levels of
Impact
customer engagement
▪ The team credits the conversations and debates held during this framing period as necessary to identify
and resolve the potential stumbling blocks related to the strategic direction
Please note: This is a kick-off workshop and is not the same as the “Ten Test
Walkthrough” nor the “Strategy Development Walkthrough”
7,000
6,000
5,000
4,000
3,000 Average top
2,000 quintile $1,246 Average middle
class $1m
1,000
Ø 102 0
-1,000
-2,000 Average bottom
quintile $(678)1
-3,000
-4,000
-5,000
Avg. EP 1246 113 1 (87) (678)
Total EP 555,529 50,514 605 (38,942) (303,655)
1 Top 3000 companies by revenues in 2011, less firms with insufficient data to calculate an accurate average economic profit for 2007-11 and 1997-01
* Companies with EP > $US 10bn excluded: Microsoft, Exxon Mobil, China Mobile, Gazprom, Apple, BHP Billiton (averages and cut-offs maintained)
* Companies with EP < $US 5bn excluded: Sprint Nextel, Kepco, EDF, Surgutneftegaz, Tepco
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
36 28 122 49 126 80 106 109 112 65
61
-500 31
Diver- Metals & Specialty Machi- Food Chemicals Auto
sified Mining retail nery products Trading 84
Wireless compon-
-1,000 telecom telecom comp-
ents Airlines
services services anies &
distri-
Pharma- Oil, Gas, Electric
butors
ceuticals and utilities
consum-
able
fuels
1 Top 3000 companies by revenues in 2011, less firms with insufficient data to calculate an accurate average economic profit for 2007-11 and 1997-01
2 Economic profit divided by number of companies; industry granularity of 60 industries
Quintiles 1 2 3 4 5
9,000
8,000 TOP MIDDLE BOTTOM
7,000
6,000
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
Ø 102 0 ? ? ? ?
-1,000
-2,000
-3,000
-4,000
-5,000
4 The strategy table – Organize your strategic options, make them easy to review at a
glance. Refine your table throughout the strategy journey
5 Decision criteria – Propose and agree on criteria that will support and frame the decision-
What is the set of strategic making process throughout the strategy journey
decisions underlying your
challenge and how do you make 6 Decision pyramid – Assess the nature of the decisions that need to be made – and focus
final decisions? on the most
strategic ones
Core
Key decisions which ▪ Demo plant
strategic
Strategic impact scope, ▪ Development concept
decisions
decisions direction, value of ▪ Facility sizing
opportunity ▪ Project timing/phasing
Increased commitment
8 Strategy on a page – Develop your first week’s hypotheses to set the scene for debate
9 6 key sources of bias – Check against these biases and errors that we can be unaware of
What are your first hypotheses on
solutions and what are your
underlying biases? 10 Bias iceberg – Surface and debate fundamental beliefs
Frame
Frame
11 Advanced key assumption check– Being aware of your assumptions is vital to avoiding
decision bias. Have your key stakeholders identify and debate their assumptions
Herding and
Confirmation bias Attribution errors
groupthink
Aspiration
How we
talk about
strategy Initiatives The most important part
of setting strategic
aspirations is to surface
and debate the
Choices fundamental beliefs
about how about how your industry
What to create will evolve and why you
strategy value make money
really is
“ “ “
A landline phone company An animal feed manufacturer A bank
▪ A landline phone company ▪ The client’s experience said ▪ This client asked us how to increase total
was trying to mitigate the the plant’s utilization and consumer balances, which it had been
loss of leased handsets location near farmers were pursuing by promoting high-rate time
when subscribers moved. the keys to success deposits (CDs)
They asked us for help in ▪ Although it was outside the ▪ Having ascertained that the client also had
“improving the handset initial scope of the high customer turnover and low
retrieval process” engagement, the team profitability, the team realized that it was
▪ The team overturned a key tested the assumption. And unclear how the types of larger balances
client assumption: That the showed that these two affected profitability. If some products are
phones were worth factors were actually no much more profitable than others, overall
collecting longer the drivers of profit for balance sizes may not be an
▪ The team discovered that it the client appropriate goal
would be much more ▪ Instead, the team found that ▪ To test the assumption about balances,
efficient to stop the handset product mix explained the team gathered data and determined
retrieval programs, suffer a virtually all of the profit the profitability of each product. They
small amount of handset differentials between plants discovered that some products were much
loss, and save the entire – in particular, the proportion more profitable for the bank than others
cost of physical collection of a new, low-volume and that CD customers in particular were
product that could be unprofitable, failed to generate cross-sell,
economically transported and often defected to competitors
over longer distances. This ▪ The team radically changed the bank’s
led to entirely new priorities strategy by proving that overall balances
with regard to product and were not important and that the only way
location for the client to boost profitability and
reduce the loss of customers was to
These are examples of how incorrect increase checking account balances
beliefs and assumptions can block
success
2 Write all of the assumptions that underlie your To test the assumption ask
thinking about a problem on a white board. Writing ▪ How do you know each to be true?
them down is key to forcing yourself to carefully ▪ Can you think of any plausible
articulate the assumption and test it – if you try to scenario under which any of these
do this in your head you are losing most of the assumptions is not true?
value of the exercise ▪ Could any of these have been true
in the past but no longer be true?
3 For each assumption ask if it is basically solid or if ▪ What would happen to the overall
you can make a counter-case. Dig deeper to hypothesis if any assumption is
explore weak assumptions and you might find an overturned?
answer that overturns the client’s set beliefs – a real
breakthrough when it comes to problem solving
SOURCE: MCAPS | 23
FRAME
Actions and templates: Defining the boundaries Essential
12 Ten Test Walkthrough – This provocative full-day workshop will reshape the way your
What boundaries define the clients think about their strategy
solution?
13 Ten Tests 2-pager – Quick guide to the Ten Tests
strategy is Does your strategy tap the true source …or is it based on a misplaced diagnosis of why you earn
2
▪ Pinpointed the biggest issues facing your of advantage?
“
This is the best workshop I have ever attended…
– Client CEO
…The best day We loved the Ten Tests workshop and want to
you can spend integrate it into our mid-term review process…
with your team – Client Head of Strategy
talking about We discovered we could generate ~US$2-3b
your strategy additional revenue… – Client CEO
Contact Business_Strategy@mckinsey.com to get more information on the Ten Test Walkthrough or the
invitation email, presentation and workbook
1 No. of tests passed; % of respondents, n=2,135
Does the strategy tap the true source …or is it based on a misplaced diagnosis of why
2
of advantage? you earn returns?
Is the strategy granular about where to …or are markets defined generically, failing to
3
compete? allocate resources to match opportunities?
Does it put the enterprise ahead of …or does it assume continuation of the status
4
trends and discontinuities? quo, not reacting to change until it’s too late?
Does the strategy embed privileged …or does it rely on common analysis of common
5
insight and foresight? data to yield common wisdom?
Is uncertainty properly defined and …or is uncertainty either being ignored or inducing
6
accounted for? paralysis?
Does it balance commitment-rich choices …or is there too much planning and too little focus
7
with flexibility and learning? on choices that can unfold over time?
Have alternatives been evaluated without …or does the strategy fall victim to biases and
8
bias or false inference? faulty logic in the way decisions are made?
Is the strategy translated into clear …or is it a vague statement of intent that doesn’t
10
actions and reallocation of resources? connect to new actions?
1 Sum of responses under each rating for all questions under each test divided by the total number of responses for all questions under each test
Frame
Frame What boundaries define the solution?
14 Strategy interview guide – Conduct interviews with the key stakeholders in order to get
insight into the context and decision-makers
Do you understand key
stakeholder/decision makers?
15 Pre-Mortem – Run this quick workshop to uncover subtle obstacles and challenges – and
define ways to overcome them early on
Learn
more? –
Read the
full manual
“Frame How do you plan the strategy journey to
your ensure that you focus on the right areas
decisions” and build broad conviction along the
in #788839 way?
(10 min)
▪ Find out what the CEO would most like focus on during the meeting by
Plan the dialogue giving them some options. Very often, people fail to set up a productive
carefully discussion in interviews
Ask questions that ▪ E.g. Say something more specific like: “Do you think you are beating
get a constructive the market?” This naturally leads to a conversation on Economic Profit
dialogue going and key advantages
Ask questions where ▪ E.g. “How granular is your perspective on your market/competition/your
we can immediately own business”; “What are your decisions along the strategy table”; “Do
add value you explicitly de-bias decision processes”
Ask questions where ▪ E.g. “Do you find it difficult re-allocate resources?”; “What are the
emotions will be decisions you and your team wrestle with the most?”; “Are you
triggered comfortable with the roles your people are playing in the process?”
“▪
What?
“▪
Who?
▪ Commitment across the business from all leaders (operations and support functions) starting
Lack of with CEO
leadership
▪ Clear and productive SteerCo to manage interface at all times
▪ Clear and comprehensive communication from the project teams to the business and within
Lack of comm- the project teams themselves
unication and
coordination
▪ GMs responsible for selling the project to the business, supervisors outline the program to the
crew
▪ Go on-site to develop the answer with the people who do the work every day
Failure to link to
operations
▪ Understand what the data is and where to get it
▪ Ensure we have the right focus on execution (including impact of enablers)
▪ Get the right people involved – include different departments (e.g. IT, Finance, HR)
Failure to
involve the right
▪ Ensure appropriate representation in meetings and within teams
people ▪ Ensure we have the right mix of people and capabilities
Frame
What boundaries define the solution?
Frame
16 Engagement principles – 4 principles to help your stakeholder interaction flow from the
start
Learn
more? – How do you plan the strategy 17 Strategy Development Walkthrough – This one day workshop takes your client on a
Read the journey to ensure that you focus journey through the full strategy creation process
full manual on the right areas and build broad
“Frame conviction along the way? 18 Interaction formats – Set up stakeholder interactions to optimize the participants’ benefits
your
decisions”
and engagement
in #788839
(10 min) 19 Make my work plan – Set up your strategy work plan quickly with “My Workplan”
(workplan generator link to come)
▪ A good strategy process engages clients in the journey from the start,
Start as you mean to rather than working out the answer and then “syndicating” it.
finish ▪ Kick off with clarity on which questions matter and who needs to
be involved
The “social process” ▪ Typically, our workplans focus on what work we’ll do and what end
needs as much products we’ll deliver … clients tend to look at the engagement as
thought as the “When will I see you and what will we talk about?”
“problem solving ▪ This needs explicit design and an assessment of whether, for the
process” in the toughest things clients need to digest, you have enough time and the
workplan right kind of interactions in place for them to be able to digest it
Trade-offs between ▪ Our default is to sacrifice the social process for scope and
scope, burden of proof analysis – but it can lead to false victories. Make these trade-offs
and the social process explicit with the clients
must be explicit
▪ The great privilege and responsibility of working on strategy is to seek
Don’t confuse
the truth. Shifts in strategy are often confronting and threaten existing
engagement with
interests, or simply counter-intuitive and take time to be accepted. The
compromise or
purpose of an effective social process is to engage clients on the
consensus
journey, but not to have them agree every step of the way
Frame Evolve
Diagnose Forecast Search Choose Commit
| 35
FRAME
17 The Strategy Development Walkthrough in a nutshell
Contact Business_Strategy@mckinsey.com
for more material
Evolve