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How To Compile Your Annual Route Plan (507)

Your route should plan ahead because this will help achieve better results and offers your route members a shared document reflecting what the members set out to achieve jointly for the coming year.

This Guide should be read along with the other factsheets on planning listed at the bottom of this page, since these offer many insights into planning in this Guide in the context of doing your annual plan.

Why it is important to compile an annual route plan

One of the very important results  of your route’s planning process will be to document the annual route plan so that you have a point of reference for use in the following:

  • Assigning responsibilities to individuals – with a documented annual plan, Route Forum members can be kept accountable for the deliverables they took responsibility for.
  • Confirming deadlines for achieving important milestones at different points in the year, which makes it possible to gauge progress and revise plans if needed.
  • Providing individual members and specifically Route Forum members with the authority to act on behalf of the route.
  • Defining a budget as approved by the members, where the anticipated income and allocated expenditure items for the route are specified.

What is involved in writing an annual plan?

Your annual plan is a documented record of the planning for the coming year ahead. It is the outcome of your route planning process, which could include a members’ workshop or other forms of membership consultation. 

In fact, it would most likely be counterproductive for the route’s leaders to produce an annual plan without involving the members.”The plan must be the members.” They must be motivated to contribute their time to the route.

In producing the annual plan, you should understand that planning forms part of the plan-do-review cycle and that planning is mostly preceded by reviewing what happened thus far, and is then followed by the doing.

Having noted that members’ inputs should be sought and – if possible – a route workshop should be organised, it must also be acknowledged that some individuals may be better than others at writing the document and compiling the needed information. For this purpose, it may work well to appoint a task team to compile a draft version of the planning documents, so that members and/or the Route Forum may inspect the implications of adopting the plans (as what must be done the coming year). This task team will report to the Route Forum on progress and challenges.

Who is involved in producing the annual planning?

The task team appointed to write the plan and the route leadership will be most active in the planning process and in producing the planning document.

The involvement of members, be it less than with Route Forum members, forms a key part of the process and – if possible –  a workshop should be organised for members to co-create the plan.

How to do annual planning for your route?

Your route will have many options to choose from in the format and approach of  compiling the annual plan. Some of the links at the bottom of this page will lead you to using tools like the Flow Canvas One-Page Planning Tool, which are well suited for planning in purpose-driven organisations.

Other Factsheets

Also see:

 

 

 




How To Organise A Workshop For Your Annual Plan (354)

The level of participation by your route members in route activities and projects is one of the most important factors that will determine your route’s success. Your members have access to many resources and, since they are involved in their own tourism businesses or initiatives, they are also likely to have insight into what approach would work best for the route. This is why organising a planning workshop is the best way for your route to identify what you should include in your annual route plan.

In this Guide, you will find advice on organising and structuring a route workshop as part of the process of compiling your annual route plan. The context and format of such a plan is covered in other Guides in this toolkit, which you should also consult while you are organising your workshop.

Why is the route planning workshop important?

While there are many ways to motivate members to participate and to get their inputs on what the route should be planning for, the most powerful way to involve members in planning is through a workshop.

The workshop format is perfect for bringing people together, engaging them through structured questions and educational exercises, and then recording their inputs in such a way that it shapes the annual route plan. It also gives the busy route members the assurance that they can dedicate a limited amount of time for their input to be included in the plans for the route in the coming year.

What is involved in running an annual plan workshop?

The better prepared you are for your planning workshop, the more likely you are to get strong involvement of members and the more likely you are to come up with good plans for your route. What follows is a summary of the most important aspects of preparing for a successful workshop.

Timing

The date and time that you select for your workshop is very important, since it will determine members’ participation levels. It is worth first identifying a few possible dates and checking with members how these fit with their programmes, and only to confirm the date after feedback was received.

The time you set aside for the workshop will depend on the extent of reflection and planning needed. For an annual planning workshop, it may be worth setting aside a full day and, if you anticipate that you need to reconsider the full extent of the route’s purpose and objectives, more than one day may be needed. However, it is possible to present a productive workshop in shorter periods, such as three or four hours, but if the time allocation is too short, it is likely to become a meeting, in which plans are discussed, rather than a workshop, in which new ideas are generated.

Venue

The venue selected for the workshop should offer a quiet space where members will not be distracted. It is preferable to host the workshop away from where members’ normal activities have the potential of interrupting their participation. It does not need to be luxurious, but comfort is a requirement.

Ease of access is a requirement, but it is not a good idea to select a venue where members will be tempted to slip away to other attractions in the immediate vicinity.

Seating at the venue should preferably give all participants equal status. Use of a U-shaped table set-up or circle works well, even if two rows of tables are needed to accommodate everyone.

Organise the presentation equipment and flipcharts you will need beforehand and ensure that the needed power plugs are available and functional. Also remember to organise enough pens and paper for members who may need it.

Programme

The planning workshop task team should carefully consider the workshop programme and the desired outcomes. The activities included in the programme should lead proceedings towards the desired outcomes. The example of a workshop programme included in the toolkit should offer a good framework for your route to use as a starting point in deciding what you need to include in your planning workshop’s programme (see Resource: Template: Programme Outline For Annual Planning Workshop).

Activities and Exersises

The programme should be designed in such a way that there is natural flow of proceedings and ideas. This can be achieved by combining exercises and activities with individual writing, group chats, report-backs and open floor discussions. A balance in variation is the best way to ensure progress and to keep participation levels high. There are many online resources available to get tips on how to keep proceedings lively (a Google search will deliver many ideas), but do not overdo it – keep the balance right!

Facilitation

The purpose of the workshop is for the route to reflect on its past activities, to consider where it wants to go in the next year, and to allocate responsibilities. It is advisable to appoint a facilitator to keep engagement levels high and to ensure that the workshop covers what needs to be covered. For this reason, it works best to have a skillful facilitator who does not have a key role or any role in the route, if possible. In some instances, an Open Africa routes co-ordinator maybe available and may serve this role well.

Record-keeping

A workshop is not like a meeting, where minutes needs to be kept of the discussions and decisions. However, it is very important that the ideas, suggestions, initiatives, activities, objectives and any other relevant information that is generated is collected and recorded in a format that can be used in producing the annual route plan document. If flipcharts are used during the workshop, the newsprint sheets may be perfect for recording during the workshop, but they will have to be captured as text on a computer for use during the documentation of the plans.

Task allocation

A great workshop will come to nothing if you are not focused on capturing the tasks generated during the workshop and allocating these to individual members to complete by a specified deadline. One of the key tasks of the annual planning workshop will be the creation of a year plan document. Ideally, you would want to allocate this task to a person or task team known for attention to detail.

Who is involved in organising the workshop?

The route’s Chairperson should take a direct interest in the preparation for the annual planning workshop. However, he or she may not be the best person to facilitate the workshop, because of the important role he or she plays in the route’s activities. It may be best to appoint a facilitator for the workshop who is good at managing a process, understands the issues involved, and has an easy way of getting people to participate.

The Route Forum should identify a suitable date for the workshop that will suit most members. A task team should be appointed to prepare for the workshop, with the Chairperson, facilitator and two or three more members. This task team will be responsible for inviting and reminding members, setting out the workshop programme, organising the venue and catering, and all other aspects relating to the planning workshop.

Member participation is what the workshop is about, so they should be the focus of the proceedings.

The workshop programme may also include inputs or delivery of a presentation by an outside expert or official of an important associate organisation.

How to present the planning workshop in your route

The Route Forum sets the stage for the annual planning workshop and hands responsibilities to the task team. From then on, it remains the task team’s task to ensure that the preparation is done, that members attend, and that the proceedings run smoothly

Practical tips

  • Clearly define the desired outcomes – the Route Forum should define the outcomes before the task team is appointed to prepare for and organise the workshop.
  • Good preparation is essential – appoint a task team to plan for and deliver the event.
  • Neutral facilitation is desirable – if possible, get a person outside the route to facilitate the workshop.
  • Double-check logistics – workshops can be ruined by little things (power cords, noise outside, or any other unforeseen issues that may arise).
  • Make it exciting for members – invite members and emphasise something new or exciting to motivate them to make an effort to come to the event.

Use of this Guide

This Guide focuses on the process of organising a planning workshop. It will help those who are organising the workshop.

Other Fact sheets

You may also want to take a look at the following Guides and Examples, which cover related topics:




How To Compile A One-Page Plan (358)

Business planning can seem a daunting task. This is specially true when we think of the format of the document a bank may require to consider an application for business finance. As a result, we tend to avoid compiling a business plan when an outside party such as a financier is not asking for it.

But what if it was easy and quick to compile a business plan? What if we could do it on one page only, while it still addresses all the key elements of what we need to plan for? Would that be different? Would completing a plan such as the annual plan for a route not be something that would become possible to do?

In this Guide, you will be introduced to doing a one-page business plan by using the Flow Canvas Planning Tool. It offers a simple yet comprehensive method for completing a business plan that is summarised onto a single page.

Why is doing a one-page plan important?

In today’s fast-changing world, we need to plan for the next step towards our goals without always knowing the full path of getting to the desired destination. This is rather scary, since you must acknowledge that you will never know for sure exactly how things will pan out, even after completing your business plan.

All our plans and actions will not come to much and we will not accomplish what we aim for if we are not capable of dreaming with conviction in concert with developing and implementing our detailed plans. A one-page plan can link our dreams with our actions while showing us exactly what must be done next. When you have your plans summarised on one page, it becomes very easy to share with all the involved people, and for them to see where they fit into the bigger picture. It also serves as a handy tool to assess your progress and refine your plan, making changes to the one-page plan as the situation unfolds or as the conditions change. 

What is involved in doing a one-page plan?

The challenge you face in planning is to combine your dreaming with the nuts and bolts of the activities and actions required to achieve good results. Your task is to relate the various activities you are planning to your organisational purpose so that you are sure that what you do is in fact contributing to the reason for your organisation to exist. This is why you should start your planning process with confirming your organisational purpose (see Guide: How To Unite Your Route Behind A Shared Purpose or Vision). When you have clarity on your purpose (the reasons for why your route exists and what the vision is you have of the future), you are equipped to define what you need to do to achieve this, when and where you need to do it with whom, and how you will be doing it (see Guide: How To Understand Your Annual Route Planning). The one-page planning format will come in very handy when you do your annual route plan (see Guide: How To Organise A Workshop For Your Annual Plan). You may identify the best one-page planning tool for you. In this Guide, we refer to the Flow Canvas One-Page Planning Tool, since it offers an easy-to-understand yet comprehensive framework organised around nine straight-forward questions (see Video: How To Use The Flow Canvas One-Page Plan).

What is the Flow Canvas?

Flow Canvas Think of business planning like artists would when setting out to create great paintings – they start with a clean canvas and a vision of what it is they would like to express. Then, within the confines of the canvas, they produce something of dazzling attraction that connects with the world out there, that gets people to respond, and that adds value to their lives. The same applies to business planning, where you create a “picture” of a business proposition that will add value to the lives of those who respond. The Flow Canvas provides a bit more structure to the picture/painting than an artist would – the “planning canvas” is divided into nine areas, each devoted to a specific question. In answering all nine questions, you complete the full picture of your route on a single page. The result is displayed on a one-page plan that everyone in the route can refer to in guiding their activities. They can all see what the route is setting out to achieve and how they fit into the picture.

How the Flow Canvas works

The Flow Canvas is based on three important principles. First, as with the surface of a canvas for painting, you must always cover the full extent of the two spacial dimensions – height (top-bottom) and width (left-right). Planning Polarities on the Flow Canvas On the Flow Canvas, these are called the Planning Polarities, and are organised as follows:

  • Top-bottom: At the top of the canvas, you answer questions oriented towards Thinking & Visualisation (create focused benefits, innovate within your business idea, and improve the way things are done). The bottom is oriented towards Action & Manifestation of ideas (produce value, deliver your product or service, transact and make deals).
  • Left-right: On the right of the canvas, you address questions oriented towards Differentiation & Visibility (be distinct and congruent, connect with the people you are meant to serve, and increase your desirability). while the left side is oriented towards Integration & Efficiency (utilise resources efficiently, lead/govern sustainably, and refine what you do).

Second, as proven in nature, working in a cycle is the most efficient and logical way of achieving results. There must be flow within a cycle so that progress unfolds evenly from the one stage to the next, without bottlenecks or leakage. This is the Flow Cycle. Spiral of Intention Third, when a cycle is completed, it leads to a new cycle. Progress is achieved through learning from what was concluded, thus achieving upward movement, forming a rising spiral of growth. The cycle revolves around the centre of the business canvas, from where it moves up and clockwise around until it reaches the top again, ready to proceed to the next cycle. This growth path is called the Spiral of Intention, since it revolves around the central question of why the business exists – its purpose or intention – with each new cycle building on the previous.

Using the Flow Canvas as a planning tool

The Flow Canvas is a organisational planning tool based on answering nine questions. It is as easy to apply to both high-level strategic planning and specific activities. You can ask the questions about the business as a whole, or you can apply it to a project, or even a specific task. The starting point is the route’s reason for existence – its Purpose – which is the glue that keeps together all the route’s complexities. A clearly defined Purpose shapes the route culture, its relationships with other parties – in fact, every aspect of the organisation’s DNA. The other eight questions follow the Flow Cycle through the Planning Polarities, so that all the dimensions of the organisation are addressed.

 The Questions To Answer

Flow Canvas - 9 Questions On the canvas, the core question of Purpose is appears in red. The answer to this question does not normally shift much over the medium term. It is lasting! It is not at the centre of the canvas without reason – it has a direct and ongoing influence on all the other questions. The core question is:

  • Why does your business exist? We can call this element of the Flow Canvas ‘Purpose’.

When the core question is clearly answered in the planning process, you can move on to what is called the four primary questions, indicated in yellow. In answering these questions, it is best to start with clarifying your business idea or focused niche, based on (and as a direct expression of) the answer to the core question. Then move on to when and where you will deliver value. This will unlock clues as to who the customers are you are meant to serve and how you will contribute to ecological sustainability and create ongoing profitability. The four primary questions are:

  • What gives you a unique focus within your niche? Call this element Focus.
  • When and where do you deliver value to whom? Call this element Transaction.
  • Who are the ‘fans’ you connect with and where are they? Call this element Audience.
  • How do you lead/govern and sustain profits? Call this element Culture.

With the primary questions answered, you can move on to the secondary questions, indicated in green. The secondary answers are “bridges” that connect the primary answers with each other. The four secondary questions are:

  • What are you noticed and remembered by?  Call this element Attention.
  • What are the promises your ‘fans’ respond to? Call this element Desire.
  • How do you organise your teams, systems and money? Call this element Delivery.
  • How and when do you measure your performance? Call this element Improvement.

Interestingly, it is common for the nine questions to influence each other during planning. As a result, the process of answering the questions remains dynamic – when a new question is answered, it is important to revisit the previous answers to see if the newly gained insights do not influence the previous answers to such an extent that they must be refined or changed. There are many subquestions tied up in each of these questions, which are best dealt with in specific teams to provide detailed answers. However, the one-page Flow Canvas becomes a very handy summary of what the route really is about!

Who is involved in compiling your one-page plan?

The format of the one-page Flow Canvas Plan is easy to understand because it summarises the route plan and shows the relationships between the nine elements of the plan. This makes it easy to involve all your route members in the planning process. You may be well served in organising an annual planning workshop to compile the route’s year plan (see Guide: How To Organise A Workshop For Your Annual Plan). While input from all members is great to ensure that everyone shares the direction the route is taking, it is still the Route Forum’s task to steer the process, to summarise the input from members, and to fill the gaps. When the one-page plan is done, it is also the Route Forum’s job to go into detailed planning for those aspects where more specific information is needed, such as the route budget or specific projects.

How to use your one-page plan in your route?

The nine questions of the Flow Canvas form a cycle (see the arrows in the graphic above). The cycle explains the flow from one stage to the next, as it is anticipated to unfold. You may note, however, that it is not a requirement to follow the sequential flow through the phases of the cycle when you do your planning. In fact, it is recommended that you first focus on the elements on which you have the most clarity after you have clarified your Purpose. The following sequence explains how the nine elements of the Flow Canvas follow each other in the Flow Cycle:

  • PURPOSE: Your Purpose explains why your route (or organisation) exists and the difference you are making in the world. Purpose is different to the rest of the elements on the Flow Canvas insofar as your Purpose is lasting – with the others you attend to the activities for the next cycle of your plans. Your Purpose remains constant through many cycles and provides you with ongoing direction.
  • FOCUS: Your Focus clarifies your uniqueness in terms of the specific idea that makes your route different from other destinations, and the distinctive value you create within your niche. Your Focus is all about the benefits you offer, rather than the people you serve, through what you do in your route.
  • ATTENTION: While your focus clarifies your uniqueness, it is the element of Attention through which you explain this uniqueness and the benefits you offer to the outside world. You are noticed through delivering a congruent message, appropriately positioned so that you are recognised where it matters.
  • AUDIENCE: Your Audience are the people who benefit from what you offer. They are your biggest supporters. Since this element is about identifying who the people are you are meant to serve, it is also important to clarify who those people are you are not meant to serve – you cannot be everything to everyone!
  • DESIRE: When you have attracted the attention of your audience, you need to draw them closer so that they cannot resist what you are offering. You achieve this by planning for the element of Desire, where you remove the objections and obstacles in the way of easy transacting with you.
  • TRANSACTIONS: The element of Transactions is where you exchange value. It is turning the benefit described in your Focus into a value exchange. Here, you describe where and when you will be transacting with whom. However, it is about confirming the transaction but not delivering the value yet.
  • DELIVERY (also known as RESOURCES): The element of Delivery is about making good on what was promised. It is all about organising your teams, systems and money. This element is about meticulous planning of your operations, logistics and resources.
  • CULTURE: Your Culture is about functioning as a sustainable organisation and the values underpinning your governance. Here you clarify how you organise yourself and control your internal environment to maintain efficiencies.
  • IMPROVEMENT: With the Improvement element you identify the best ways for you to measure your performance so that you ensure that you keep contributing to your Purpose. You also identify bottlenecks or inefficiencies in the flow of your Flow Cycle by quantifying key measures for each of the elements. The aim is to get better before you enter the next cycle.

In following the above sequence, you will see how the one element progresses to the next, which should not be surprising, since it follows the natural path of shifting energies, as described in ancient Chinese thinking about achieving good flow (see Guide: How To Understand Your Natural Strengths). This offers you a good picture of how the sequence of your planned organisational development will unfold. However, as noted, you are not obliged to follow this sequence when planning. You may move from the elements clearest to you to those you are less clear about. The big benefit of this dynamic influence between elements is that the clarity you have with one may help you define your plans for an element you may feel less confident about.

Other Fact sheets

You may also want to have a look at the following Guides and Examples covering related topics:

Other resources to use

There are several resources to your disposal to make use of:

 




How To Approach Your Annual Route Plan (124)

Winston Churchill is quoted as saying that “those of us who plan are bound to do better than those who do not plan, even though those who plan rarely stick to the plan”. This is why we should plan – there is something inherent to the process of planning that helps us achieve better results!

This Guide provides you with insights of what should be covered in your route plan for the year and how you should ideally go about in doing the planning.

Why is your annual route plan important?

When we are busy making things happen, we rarely have the time to stand back and assess if we are indeed on the right path to reach the destination we are aiming for. This is why the route should put enough time aside every year to develop a well-considered year plan.

The process of producing an annual plan provides the route members with the opportunity to prioritise what should be done in the year ahead. It also offers the opportunity to ask if the route has the capacity to take on all of these plans. This may lead to difficult but essential decisions on what can be achieved with the resources available to the route.

The annual planning document provides a point of reference that is very useful for the following:

  • It assigns responsibilities to individuals that they will be kept accountable for.
  • It sets deadlines for achieving important milestones at different points in the year.
  • It provides individuals with the authority to act on behalf of the route.
  • It formalises a budget for the route to describe the anticipated income and allocated expenditure items.

The diagram below explains the cycle visually:

What is planning?

Plan-Do-ReviewPlanning is not an aspect that should be looked at  as a once-off. It is an on going activity. Planning forms part of a three-step organisational cycle, consisting of (a) Planning, (b) Doing and (c) Reviewing. Good/Successful business happens in cycles… Planning is followed by Doing, which is followed by Reviewing, which is followed by the next cycle’s Planning.

In this way, we see how planning fits into our activities. And as you journey through the three-step cycle, the one cycle following on the next, you get better and better at what you do and your results improve too!

In some instances, this cycle lasts for a day, or perhaps even a few hours, before you enter the next cycle of planning, doing and reviewing – but for organisations like your route, the cycle is likely to be much longer. You could, for instance, meet monthly as an executive committee to asses progress. As a executive committee, you could also do a plan for the next month, which would then be followed by an ongoing monthly assessment. In the case of your annual plan, it could take a full year before you review and refine your plan for the next year.

‘Do’ is a powerful ingredient of success. However, it is also in the doing that we can get stuck.

Your annual plan is a documented record of the planning for the coming year ahead. It is the outcome of your route planning and has huge value for guiding your route members when they are busy doing the implementation of your route projects. The planning document also helps you when reviewing, since it provides a benchmark to assess progress against. In this way, the plan is an indispensable tool, helping you along in achieving results and realising your route’s goals.

As active citizens and entrepreneurs, we are often supportive of ambitious ideas. This is also true for what we want to achieve with our routes where we can agree about the bigger intention of the route by developing a route purpose statement (See Guide: How to unite your route behind a shared purpose).

It may not always be clear how all the doing of your route members add to achieving the route’s purpose. But when you follow the Plan-Do-Review cycle, you can ensure that during your review, you always ask how effective you are in contributing towards your purpose, and in this way, you can create better results, which you will know are congruent to your route’s bigger intentions.

While your purpose serves as a guiding light to give you direction, your immediate focus during your planning should be on the activities of the next business cycle, which in the case of an annual plan is the year ahead. Your purpose remains fairly constant over the years, but the cycles of planning, doing and reviewing are likely to shift. It is therefore very important to spend enough time on your annual plan so that you take these shifts into account.

The five questions for your plan

Your annual plan is essentially a business plan with a focus on the year ahead.

When you do your annual plan, think of it in a similar way you would think of a cake recipe. To bake a cake, you follow a recipe that includes a combination of flour, baking soda, butter, milk and sugar. Without these five ingredients, it would not be a recipe for cake. But one cake recipe is different from another in how these ingredients are combined and the flavour that is added. Like with a cake recipe, we can also identify the essential ingredients to include in your annual plan to ensure that you are in fact describing a complete business plan for a thriving route.

So, what are the ingredients of a business plan?

Interestingly, the essentials of a business plan are exactly the same as the five fundamental questions a journalist must answer when writing a good news article. To provide a full account of an event, a reporter must provide the reader with answers to all five these questions. These questions are:

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

These are also the five fundamental questions a good plan answers so that it explains your Why (your intention, purpose or destination) and it shows Who will do What by When and How (your actions and the best way to get there). Like with a news story, all five of these questions need attention in the planning process to create a well-considered and balanced plan. Exactly how you deal with these questions in your plan may vary, but you must cover all five questions for each project or activity.

While we need to be thorough in covering all five questions, it is really the Why question that stands out as the foundation on which we can build our route (See Guide: How to unite your route behind a shared purpose or vision). The Why is often overlooked when we focus on the ‘busyness’ of life.  In your planning it is best to start with your Why – the organisational purpose. Your purpose will shape the answers to the other questions and provide cohesion to your plan.

Why?

The Why question is about reflection and understanding the bigger intention or purpose of your route. In your plan, you need to be clear about the reasons for your route to exist and what you have set as the bigger objectives – perhaps even bigger than what you will be able to achieve in the next year.

But even if you are sure you will not achieve these objectives during the period you are planning for, it is important to put your organisational purpose into words so that it offers you a guiding light to show the way for the next question to ask, namely, What?

What?

Clarity on the reasons for your route to exist will help you greatly in identifying what it is that the route should be planning for in the next year. Each and every activity should support your Why in very concrete ways. Many routes (specially those whose leaders are creative people) come up with many possible activities and projects. In fact, they have too many things to do and if they do not eliminate some of the ideas, will get stuck in trying to do too many things at once.

When you have too many possible activities and projects, you can easily identify those to prioritise and those you need to park or scratch from your plans:

– First, ask yourself which of these projects or activities will contribute the most to the Why you identified for your route. Those that will make the biggest difference in reaching your route’s potential are the activities and projects to put at the top of your priority list and that should receive the most attention in your annual plan.
– Second, ask yourself how these projects or activities are to be implemented and made to work. Identify those where you battle to see a clear picture of how it will happen and immediately scratch them out or park them for future attention.

The challenge in your annual planning is to identify those projects and activities to prioritise based on the outcome of the two questions above. So, when you ask: “What should we plan for?” you should be able to identify about six projects to prioritise. For most routes, this will be more than sufficient to take the route forward during the coming year.

Who?

The Who question is about connection and activity. It is about answering the questions: “Who will make this happen” and “With whom should we connect to make this happen?”

You will notice that, sometimes, asking these questions do not lead to an answer. You may just be planning for something for which there are no people to make it happen, which in itself will be an indication that what you were planning for should perhaps not have made it to your list of projects or activities for the year.

It is useful to think about the Who question on two fronts:

– First, who will be the internal people involved – the members or staff – and who will be suitable to serve as the project coordinator?
– Second, who are the external parties the route will have to connect with and get buy-in from to make this happen, and are they around and willing to participate?

Answers to these questions will guide you in you plans for creating of relationships and involvement of members, which will allow you to move onto the next question.

When?

The When question should perhaps be called the When/Where question, since it relates to timing as much as it relates to positioning. In fact, the underlying idea relates to the value that will be created by getting your timing and positioning right. If you have identified a good What and have connect the right Who, you can take big strides forward when you get things going at the right time and the right place.

Sometimes patience is needed, since everything is not yet aligned, and other times you should not be missing a beat otherwise the opportunity may pass. This is not always easy to get right in your planning, since the conditions for success may change rapidly or what was anticipated does not happen.

When things do come together at the right time and place, you will have to deliver on What was planned, for Who, to happen by When. This then becomes the time to answer the How question.

How?

The How question relates to the detailed logistics and technical requirements of delivering what was planned. All the value created in the culmination of the previous questions may come to nothing if the How question is not answered properly. This is about specifying the resources and budget needed, putting in place the systems and controls needed, and getting down to the harvesting the fruits of answering the previous questions well.

The How question is sometimes not easy to answer, especially if it is the first time for your route to plan for an activity. This is why it is important to learn from your mistakes… to get better the next time. The How question will therefore lead you into asking the Why question again, while reflecting on how well you have done. In this way the five questions interlocks with the Plan-Do-Review cycle.

Who is involved in your annual planning?

The route leadership will most definitely have the most active role in the planning process and developing the detail of the annual plan, but this does not imply that other members should be passive in the planning process.

Much time may be saved later in the year by involving as many members as possible in the planning process. For this purpose, it would not be a bad idea to organise a half-day (or full-day?) workshop to give route members the opportunity to determine the priorities for the route. If this is not possible, other ways of getting input from members, such as an assessment and suggestions questionnaire should be considered.

After the input from members is received, the executive committee needs to systemise the proposals and compile a realistic plan for the year ahead. The activities should also be translated into a budget, with both income and expenditure explained in detail. A cash flow forecast is also considered an essential element of the annual plan with the Treasurer taking special interest in these aspects (see Guide: How to develop and manage a route budget).

The final version of the proposed annual plan should be approved by the executive committee before it is provided to members for their approval. It is best to submit this plan to members at the AGM, but other General Meetings may also be suitable.

When the members adopt an annual plan and the accompanying budget, these documents become the guiding framework for the executive committee to comply with during the year ahead.

The annual plan does not always give each responsible person clear instructions on the detailed tasks at hand, since the emphasis is likely to be on the outcomes you are aiming for. An action plan is a much better tool to use when it comes to making sure that the tasks assigned to people are completed (see Guide: How to compile an action plan).

How to do annual planning for your route

The annual route plan is something that will be done every year.

Your founding document probably states when your financial year starts, which is practically also the best time for your annual plan to commence. For many organisations, this will be 1 March, since this date coincides with the standard tax year. But it may also be another date.

You should start the planning process at least one or two months before year-end so that you have ample time to complete the review, make detailed plans, and compile the annual budget.

Below is a suggested planning process, which you may adjust to your specific circumstances:

1. Make the previous year’s annual plan available to members, then engage them in an assessment of the performance of the route over the past year. This may be in the form of a survey or questionnaire, or you may want to organise a workshop for route members to offer their views and assessment of how the route is performing.

2. The review of the past year will lead members (either at the workshop or through the questionnaire) to suggest priorities for the coming year. It is important to remind route members of the the purpose statement as part of soliciting suggestions. The route purpose offers the bigger context for the priorities for the coming year.

3. The executive committee and project co-ordinators should assess the proposals and consolidate these into an integrated planning document, with priorities based on a reality check on what the route is capable of doing. Some suggestions will have to be shelved, because the route may not have the resources to complete all the suggested plans.

4. Next is compiling an annual budget based on the income expected from membership fees and other income-generating activities, as well as the expenditure associated with managing the route and each of the proposed projects. It may be required to reduce or even remove some projects to allow the budget to balance. It is also good practice to include a cash flow projection to the plan so that it is shown that the route will have sufficient funds throughout the coming year.

5. When the annual planning document is completed, the executive committee needs to adopt it at a properly constituted meeting. After it is adopted, the executive committee should present the annual plan and budget to the members for their approval at a General Meeting (which could be the AGM or another General Meeting).

Use of this Guide

This guide is ideal for offering members and executive members an introduction to planning and may be very useful in preparing members for participation in the annual planning process. It should be used along with the other Guides mentioned below.

Other Guides