Maybe a brightening
economic outlook or the arrival of spring explains it. Recently I’ve had more
than the usual number of conversations about planning projects. Some people are
starting to think about moving ahead on a project that had been put on hold.
Others are feeling the impact of steps they had skipped as they raced to open a
museum or complete a strategic plan. Others are ready to move forward on a bold
plan that’s been incubating. Together, these conversations have brought me back
to an early post on Museum Notes. If
you are considering some serious planning, I hope Planning
to Plan helps in your preparation.
Any major planning effort,
such as a strategic plan, master plan, or a facility plan, can feel daunting.
Maybe it’s the first major plan for the museum since opening. Perhaps board and
staff have changed significantly since the last major planning effort. Or this
could be a young museum’s very first plan. Whatever the conditions, a critical
first step for any major planning effort is preparation. Preparation for
planning is a bit like the planning process itself: engaging people in
considering what must be accomplished, how best to do it, with whom, and with
what resources. Four steps will prepare a museum for a solid planning effort.
• Get
people on board and build ownership.
Since the planning process will involve others, start talking with them: staff,
board, partners, and funders. Gathering ideas and drawing on other perspectives
will build ownership from the start. Conversations can be informal or more
formal as “job number one” of a planning task force. Ask others what they hope
the plan will accomplish, issues they see facing the museum, planning
challenges, who should be involved, and the kind of planning expertise needed.
Talk with key supporters early on. It’s an opportunity to show you’re proactive
on behalf of the organization’s future. You can also explore possible support
for the planning process itself or for some aspect of implementation. Lay the
groundwork for sharing the plan when completed.
• Learn
from experience–yours and others'.
How you approach the next round of planning is influenced by previous planning.
Do a quick assessment of past planning efforts, of what worked and didn’t work
so well. Did you get the plan you wanted? Did staff and board feel they were
included and informed? Did the plan seem too generic? Too much of a stretch?
Did people feel the plan sat on a shelf? How could implementation have been
better?
You
can learn as much from other museums’ planning efforts as from your own. Ask
about the planning work museums comparable to yours have done recently.
Identify museums of comparable size and type in other parts of the country as
well as similar local organizations that have done recent planning. Consider
asking about how long a planning process took, who participated, whether it was
facilitated internally or externally, what information they gathered, how much
it cost, what they wish they’d done differently, and how pleased they were with
the plan. Ask for a copy of the plan or a table of contents to see what the
plan covered. All of this will help in determining the plan’s scope and can
help in deciding whether to issue a request for proposals (RFP) for planners
and what the RFP might include.
• Shape
the scope. Figuring out the nature
and the scope of the plan starts with placing your planning needs in a larger
organizational and community context. Has it been five years since your last
strategic plan? Is another museum expanding their services to reach your
audience? Are funders asking tougher questions about the museum’s impact? Is it
time to rethink your exhibits? Every plan is not necessarily a standard
strategic plan, master plan, or exhibit plan. Typically a plan must be focused
to reflect a particular time frame (i.e. five-to-six years or annual); an
organizational focus (capacity building, learning impact, community engagement,
etc.); or a focused area of change on an existing strategic platform
(relocation, sustainability, etc.).
Considering
potential stakeholder involvement helps determine the scope. Is significant
community input important? Should you be reaching across sectors of the
community? Is internal alignment on core activities critical? Factors such as
external deadlines and a compressed timeline can affect a plan’s scope as can
cost. Since a plan can cost anywhere from $10,000 to $100,000, get a realistic
idea of what the type of plan you want is likely to cost.
• Match the resources to the plan.
Reviewing all the gathered information will give a clearer idea of the
resources your plan requires. Resources generally include time, expertise, and
funding which are inextricably intertwined. Based on what you hope the plan
will accomplish, think about the skills and expertise required: planning
expertise, facilitation skills, and museum knowledge.
Local
non-profit strategic planners know strategic planning. They know your community
and bring an objective perspective. Less often do they know museums, their
current issues, and standards. A board member who is a strategic planner will
know the museum, but may lack objectivity.
While
museum expertise can be valuable in strategic planning or financial planning,
it is necessary in developing education plans and exhibit plans. Specific
expertise may, or may not, be available locally so getting to know the local,
regional and national landscape will help in deciding potential planners and
likely travel costs. Sometimes a plan’s authority is linked with a particular
type of expert; sometimes its credibility comes from expert local knowledge. In
every case, skilled facilitation is critical to engaging participants and
moving the planning process forward and can be provided by someone from inside
or outside the organization with the right skills and enough time.
A
combination of internal and external players can be a good choice. In the end,
the right team always brings together expertise and local knowledge; is
compatible and interested in producing the best plan; and fits a museum’s price
range and schedule.
Preparation for planning
does take time. It also makes a noticeable difference. Preparatory work
develops a shared understanding among key players about what’s ahead and
removes a few of the inevitable obstacles. It helps bring the right players
together; manages expectations about the process and the resulting plan. All
aspects of preparation help set a planning process on a smooth course.
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