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Most of us have experienced an organization that creates goals in departmental silos. Yes, these departmental goals were crafted with the goals of the organization, but how many times have we experienced the frustration of trying to accomplish objectives when there is little to no interdepartmental communication?
A company sets its quarterly and yearly goals and the Business Development, Marketing, and Sales departments return to their departmental silos and create their goals based on the corporate goals that were just dictated to them.
Business Development has its goal to launch four new products, Marketing has its goal to launch three new promos each month and 36 for the year, and Sales Department goals were established based on last year’s numbers, tying them to sales team commissions.
Great, now the individual departments have aligned their goals to the corporate goals and everyone is ready to march forward within their perfectly siloed worlds.
So now, we have three departments tackling their departmental goals with gusto. Each department says, “Everyone move out of the way – we have our plan and we are ready for a great year.”
Business Development’s aggressive push to achieve its goal of four new product launches within the first six months means the sales team will have a new product to introduce every six weeks.
Marketing wasn’t aware that Business Development was going to launch so aggressively, and they had their own agendas for promotions based on the existing line of products with little consideration for new product marketing and promotional initiatives.
Sales has set their product sales goals based on how they did last year and hope that the marketing team will provide some promotions and incentives that help them close deals and allow them to secure their commissions. Also, Sales has just created a separate sales goal bucket called “new products” and blindly set some sales projections.
What started as some well-thought-out company goals and high hopes morphed into dysfunctional chaos very quickly.
There was no inter-departmental sharing of objectives. For alignment within an organization to work, there MUST be interdepartmental communication of objectives and focus. To achieve corporate goals, there are way too many interdepartmental dependencies to allow independent goals to be set in departmental silos.
Part of strong planning and alignment requires there to be cross-departmental discussion regarding each department’s objectives. Each department must be aware of dependencies on another department. Too often, there are critical assumptions made regarding what other departments can do and when they can do it, without first checking in with that department.
Highly aligned organizations know the importance of communicating interdepartmental dependencies.
Based on the example above, the sales team needs to know which products Corporate would like them to focus on. It is impossible to focus on 10-15 products equally, so direction is needed.
Once Corporate has defined the sales team’s focus, then it needs to be coordinated with Marketing. Without coordinating with Marketing, the sales team is just hoping they receive timely promotions that have the right incentives to help the sales person close AND do not cannibalize their future business.
Furthermore, it would be beneficial for Sales to have some input into when new products will be launched. Launching a new product at the end of a quarter when the sales team is trying to close deals will be challenging to say the least. Also, the sales team is in the trenches and should be interfacing with Marketing to help them better understand what promotions might be best to assist with the launch. There has to be some tradeoff between the growth of existing products and the growth of new products, since introducing new products often takes more resources and time.
Lastly, Sales should be in constant contact with Business Development since they are often the eyes and ears of the marketplace. They will certainly have input into what the market is asking for and this should be communicated regularly with the Business Development team.
Based on the above example, Marketing also needs to know which products Corporate would like them to focus on. The assumption is that Sales and Marketing would have the same focus. With that said, understanding the sales team’s projections is paramount so Marketing can create promotions that assist the sales team in reaching its targets as well as communicating with sales team members to help them craft sales promotions and incentives that are meaningful to customers and don’t cannibalize future business.
Marketing also needs to coordinate and have input into new product launches. Marketing campaigns need to highly corollate with each launch.
Based on the above example, Business Development needs corporate direction regarding which products to evaluate and introduce to the business. Business Development should also be interviewing sales team members to better understand which products might best fill a market need. Also, new product launches have to be highly coordinated with the Marketing Department to help improve the chances of a successful launch.
An organization is not aligned unless there is the removal of departmental silos. Communication needs to go up, down, sideways and diagonal. True alignment requires input, feedback, and transparency between departments, and there must be open communication regarding interdepartmental dependencies. Meaning, that if we are to achieve X, we need departments A and B to deliver THIS by THIS date.
Furthermore, it’s important that each department can track another department’s progress, especially on those interdepartmental dependencies.
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