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The Key to Operationalizing Meaningful Business Impacts
By David C Forman, Author of Fearless HR and Fearless Talent Choices
WHY SHOULD YOU CARE?
The Reverse Trifecta identifies meaningful business impacts and then the capabilities in the workplace and skills in the workforce that support these desired outcomes.
The Reverse Trifecta is not about betting on several confused horses running clockwise around a racetrack. That would be amusing, but as we have seen, the Trifecta is a metaphor for something that is far more important: The three factors that characterize successful businesses and organizations—a talented workforce, an agile and vibrant organization, and meaningful business impacts ( The Trifecta – The HR Congress Magazine (hr-congress.com). All three must be present or else the picture is incomplete, the balance is upset, and the opportunity is lost. While it can be useful to write about individual popular topics such as culture, leadership, high performers, agility, mindfulness, open talent marketplaces, and transparency, the Trifecta identifies the essence of high- performing businesses and, most importantly, the interactions and symbiotic relationships among talent, culture & organization, and business results that must occur.
It also turns out that the Trifecta can work backwards. By starting at the end, the Reverse Trifecta is a useful paradigm for measuring and operationalizing business outcomes that matter. It is a very difficult and arduous task to get everyone in the organization pulling in the same direction and on the same page. Many organizations lose their way, get out of alignment, are flooded with data, and are slow to react. This is especially true in the 21st century world of unrelenting change, global interdependence, and uncertain futures. The result of these forces is that there is an abundance of irrelevant noise, poor information, missteps, extraneous data, and false positives to navigate. How can we make the best choices and focus on the critical few opportunities as opposed to the inconsequential many? How do we best use the precious resources and time that we have to get everyone synchronized and moving forward?
Keys to Operationalization
These are not new dilemmas, and there have been a variety of tools to assist organizations in implementing strategy and achieving desired outcomes. Many have been integrated into the business planning and communication processes, including SMART goals, KPIs, OKRs and OPKAs. Each of these alphabet soups has strengths but has often fallen short in the quest to achieve desired business outcomes with regularity.
There is one more practical tool that assists in operationalizing key business impacts and has benefited from the strengths and limitations of the previous approaches. The Reverse Trifecta identifies meaningful business impacts and then the capabilities in the workplace and skills in the workforce that support these desired outcomes. The place to start, then, is at the end. A meaningful business impact is not just the outcome itself but is characterized by four qualities that make that outcome meaningful: 1) clear alignment to a strategic or business standard; 2) a measure that is relevant and compelling to critical audiences; 3) supporting data that enables in-depth analysis to define problems more thoroughly; and 4) practical actions that can improve the situation and drive change.
Meaningful Business Impact for an Outcome | Criteria | Rationale |
Alignment | Strategy, business goals, value proposition, market opportunity | Why should this outcome be pursued? |
Measures that Matter | Counting the Number of times something occurs Internal year to year comparisons External benchmark comparisons Monetization | What data are most meaningful and likely to spur action? |
In-depth Analysis | Robust data and Next Level Analysis Moving beyond summary data and generalities to further define the problem. Segment results by product, region, location, competitor, workforce, or other key variables to narrow focus on the true problem. | What further insights can be gained from more in-depth analysis? |
Actionable | Organizational Capabilities Workforce Skills | What can be done? |
Figure 1: Qualities of Meaningful Business Impacts in The Trifecta
Consider the example of reducing turnover.
In terms of regrettable turnover, the workplace should reflect the model described in a previous chapter: The Secrets of High Performing Cultures – The HR Congress Magazine (hr-congress.com) and the workforce should exhibit and further develop Meta-Learning skills see: A Renaissance for the Learning Profession – The HR Congress Magazine (hr-congress.com), strong personal networks, and be comfortable with flexible team-based roles.
Reverse Engineering The Trifecta
To further illustrate the power of reversing the Trifecta, let’s consider the example of the critical business outcome of Innovation. This outcome is particularly critical in a fast-changing world, and accordingly, many businesses and organizations value innovation. But some choose to focus on other core capabilities relevant to them. So let’s run Innovation (for Company Y) through the four yardsticks for a meaningful business impact that drives the reverse trifecta.
A major problem in operationalizing meaningful business outcomes is that organizations lose their focus, try to do everything for everybody, and just like a car out of alignment, wander all over the road. Alignment answers the question of why this outcome should be pursued, and it is vital to keeping everyone “on the same page.”
The fourth method takes a different approach. I have argued in these pages (HR’s Ultimate Metric – The HR Congress Magazine (hr-congress.com) that the most compelling and meaningful metrics are not numbers or percentages, but money gained or lost. For Innovation, it is not the number of new products released, but the revenues generated by these new products that matters most to business leaders and colleagues.
The Vitality Index for Company Y is the percentage of revenue that comes from new products released in the prior two years (note: depending on the complexity of product development, it may take longer than 2 years to see revenue impacts). This percentage is then compared to standards for similar organizations, usually in the 25% to 30% range. If less than 25% of yearly revenues do not come from new products released within the past two years, the company’s innovation abilities are not achieving desired results. This, of course , is significant because many companies rely on legacy products for the majority of their revenue, and, over time, this is not a sustainable business model.
Final Thoughts
It is difficult to operationalize meaning business impacts in any company or organization. The larger the organization, the more difficult communication and execution. When the number of employees exceeds 150, research has shown that communication becomes more layered, complicated, and sporadic. Probably the most important communication within an organization is how to focus and prioritize all the possible initiatives that could be addressed, especially when so much confusion and so many possibilities abound. It is hard to keep the organization focused on the right things and people on the same page.
Because this is such a systemic weakness in most organizations, a number of tools and techniques have emerged to assist in the process of selecting, communicating, prioritizing and implementing meaningful business goals and initiatives. The alphabet soup of SMART goals, KPIs, OKRs and OPKAs have been useful tools, and, when used wisely and supported internally, can be very effective. But problems remain, and among the most salient shortcomings are the lack of alignment to a strategic or business standard (the why); not simply measuring what is easy to measure; not monetizing critical business outcomes; not being open to new market opportunities while just concentrating on short-term, often insignificant goals; failure to provide next level data analysis to pinpoint more precise diagnosis; and, perhaps most importantly, not delineating practical actions in both the workplace and workforce that enhance operationalizing key business impacts.
The Reverse Trifecta is a common-sense approach to implementing business outcomes that addresses many of these shortcomings. It also reinforces the primacy and critical interactions among the three essential elements: Meaningful Business Impacts driven by Talented Employees and supported by a Vibrant Culture & Organization. The following table summarizes how the Reverse Trifecta can be applied to the outcome of Innovation.
Meaningful Business Impact | Innovation |
Alignment | Strategic and Business Goals |
A Measure that Matters | The Vitality Index (Monetization) |
In-depth Analysis | Definitional: Distinguishing a new product from an upgrade, and using two years for product revenue expectations Further Diagnosis: Segment Vitality Index by product and markets to determine variations that should be addressed by Actions |
Actions: A Range of Organizational Capabilities that Support Innovation | Values support risk-taking, diversity of thought, inclusion, and failures as learning moments Heterogeneous and cross-disciplinary teams Open architecture innovation programs Psychological safety is promoted and reinforced Workspaces encourage collaboration and exchange of ideas Innovation fairs and contests to inject fun and get everyone involved Everyone is encouraged to speak out and contribute |
Actions: Workforce Skills (to Support Innovation) that Should be Hired for, Developed and Reinforced | Continuous learning Curiosity Lead-time ahead Risk-taking Systems thinking Collaboration Resilience |
Figure 2: The Reverse Trifecta for Innovation
Try The Reverse Trifecta (Impacts, Culture & Organization, People) in your next team session. Start at the end, with a Meaningful Business Impact, follow the flow, and enjoy the run around the track.
Written by: Dave Forman
Culture Performance Management Talent Talent Management
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