8th November 2008

Why is "Why?" still the most under appreciated question?

Questions, in life or in business, fall into the following buckets:

  • Who?
  • What?
  • When?
  • Where?
  • Why?
  • How?

I’ve spent a great deal of time defining my own as well as evaluating and using other methodologies for strategic planning.  For the record, I’m a fan of scenario planning.  If interested, here’s a pretty good read:  Profiting from Uncertainty.  Having said that, strategic planning methodology can be a lot like ice cream…some people just like different flavors and at times a different flavor is just a better choice.  If you’d like to explore methods, there’s another pretty good reference book called Strategy Safari.

Most of work I do today involves strategic planning around Customer Experience, Social Media, Communities, Influencer Programs and Voice of the Customer initiatives.  When it comes to social I often use the following planning framework to help structure a project:

image

And in case it’s not obvious, if you use this framework, start with Purpose.  I’m in the process of documenting a playbook based on this approach which hopefully I can share at a later date as the above really isn’t as detailed as it needs to be, but perhaps a reasonable starting point. 

Methodology forces you to ask and answer a lot of questions, but throwing all thoughts of methodology to the side, it has struck me in my last 6 months of consulting projects the imbalance in basic questions. 

Most of the focus on questions are the following:  What, When and How?

  • What are we going to do? 
  • What technologies are we going to use?
  • When are we going to launch?
  • When is it going to be done? 
  • How are we going to measure it? 

And far too little time focused on these questions:  Why, Who and Where?  (Especially Why!!)

  • Why are we doing this? 
  • What problem are we trying to solve (ok, ok, that’s a "what" - but it is really a why!)
  • Who is our audience?
  • Who are the internal stakeholders?
  • Where are we going to focus our efforts?

So, maybe the old questions we learned in grade school could be a pretty good v1 planning template.  The irony is that the biggest question I get asked is always around metrics and ROI.  They are critical points, but until you answer the question of why (and gain organizational agreement to that answer!!) you can’t answer the ROI question with any specifics.  I can give you a list of metrics to attach to a social site or community, but I can’t tell you if those metrics matter unless I know what the business objective is.

So, maybe some primer questions to start the list, I’m sure you can think of more to add.

  • Why:  Define you purpose
  • What:  What are the business objectives
  • Who:  Define your audience and/or segmentation
  • How:  How do our users do it today (whatever you define it is in the why question)
  • Where:  Inventory where users are going today
  • What:  What are the interactions we need to enable to improve the experience
  • What:  What systems and processes do we need to integrate with
  • What:  What technology and tools are necessary to support this effort
  • How:  How will we know it’s succeeding
  • What:  What are the success measures
  • Who:  Who are the internal stakeholders
  • Who:  Who are the key people and organizations we need to get engaged / participating?
  • What:  What are our policies and/or guidelines to govern internal participation?
  • When:  Define the project timeline
  • How:  How much is it going to cost (to execute AND sustain)

And maybe two last points.  You’ve got to re-validate that why question again and again and ensure you are continuously educating everyone involved on the answer - otherwise you’ll stray.  And lastly, friends don’t let friends plan without execution or execute without plans:) 

Sean

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This entry was posted on Saturday, November 8th, 2008 at 2:00 pm and is filed under Business Strategy, General Community Discussion. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

There are currently 6 responses to “Why is "Why?" still the most under appreciated question?”

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  1. 1 On November 10th, 2008, Sandeep said:

    Very helpful article !!!
    We have tried to explain visually how big and small companies are using Social Media on VizEdu blog !!

    Please check it out at …
    www.vizedu.com

    We look forward to your comments/suggestions .

    thanks
    Sandeep

  2. 2 On November 11th, 2008, Mick Leyden said:

    Sean,

    Great post, I couldn’t have said it better myself. In 2008 our team has managed to build quite a bit of excitement around the possibilities for social tools within our organisation, unfortunately that has mean that anyone and everyone wants to go social for everything!

    I’ve found myself over and over asking why, why do you want this project to be social? It seems that this question has never been considered by most people. The answer is often something like ‘because the other guy is doing it’ or ‘because we can’. Not a recipe for success!

  3. 3 On November 11th, 2008, Why oh why?! « From the Tram said:

    […] interesting to say. That changed this morning when I read Sean O’Driscoll’s post Why is “Why?” still the most under appreciated question? This was one of those wonderful serendipitous moments when the internet was thinking exactly what […]

  4. 4 On November 12th, 2008, Sean said:

    Thanks Mick, I enjoyed the additions in your post as well.

    sean

  5. 5 On November 17th, 2008, Charlene Li said:

    Sean - so glad you asked this question. It’s one of the main tenants behind “Groundwell”, that there by very concrete goals behind the social strategy. And you’re P’s are wonderful — I especially like “patterns” and “process” which is a better way of thinking about it than the traditional “platforms” and technologies. Bravo!

  6. 6 On November 18th, 2008, John Sheridan said:

    “Why” is the first question we ask anyone who tells us they need Social Media. Because, if you want to do something that doesn’t help achieve an organizational objective, then why do it?

    That is a nice diagrammatic way to frame the discussion, particularly, “patterns”.

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