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Alumni Consulting Team (ACT)

 

Mission, Vision, Values Facilitation

Project Definition

Many nonprofit organizations seek assistance with strategic planning. ACT has found that a successful strategic planning project requires that there first be clarity and agreement on the organization's mission or purpose. The organization's mission must be clear, and agreed to by the major stakeholders, before undertaking a strategic planning process. ACT can help the organization by introducing a process that will result in shared agreement on mission, vision, and values.

Defining Terms

The words "mission," "purpose," "vision," "values," and even "strategy," can hold very different meanings to different people. Each organization must clarify what it means by each of these terms.

The priority is to have agreement among the people involved, not to have "the right definition." That said, the following definitions provide useful guidance for many organizations. The simple diagram that follows shows the links between these elements.

Putting the Pieces Together

These elements are all part of the organization's picture of its desired future: The mission defines why the organization exists, what it aims to accomplish, and how it will proceed on its journey, while the strategy specifies the practical steps the organization will take to achieve its vision.

Deliverables

The most important deliverable from this type of project is an engaged, motivated organization, clearly focused on where it's going and ready to decide how to get there.  

Typical Project Steps

  1. Interview Executive Director (ED) to elicit his or her viewpoint, to establish goals for the process, and to create a list of stakeholders to interview.
  2. Individually interview five to nine key stakeholders (board members, staff, and other key stakeholders, e.g., donors, partners, govt. agency reps) to assess alignment on mission, vision, and values. If wide divergence appears, additional interviews may be required.
  3. Hold small focus groups (up to seven people), if needed, to complete the picture. Ensure that people are in different groups than their boss, if possible, to increase the ease of open dialogue.
  4. Complete mini-assessment of the clarity and alignment regarding the mission, vision, and values, and meet with ED to present findings. If the ED is resistant and unwilling to hear, consider ending the project.
  5. With ED, design iterative discussions where core stakeholders will clarify their views of the mission, vision, and values for the organization. Provide enough education for the group so that they know what they are trying to do, and why. (See recommended reading list.)
  6. Design additional communications and discussions to build stakeholder buy-in with additional parties. Help the client plan how to communicate these elements throughout their organization.
  7. Complete ACT Deliverable.

Model ACT Projects