When Dublin-born chemist David Lloyd became Australia鈥檚 youngest ever university boss in 2013, he resisted marking his arrival with some bold new statement of strategic direction, quietly developed in the confines of chancellery and polished to a glossy sheen by the marketing unit.
Instead, Lloyd unleashed generational change befitting a 38-year-old vice-chancellor. He enlisted not only the university community but also its global extended family to help the University of South Australia hone its mission. 鈥淯nijam鈥 made use of IBM technology to inject thousands of people into round-the-clock online conversations structured around themes, with registered participants logging in whenever they liked to gatecrash existing discussions or start new ones. The university says nearly 8,000 people from 56 countries registered for the 38-hour event, posting almost 18,000 comments across more than 1,300 conversation 鈥渢hreads鈥, overseen by IBM-trained umpires.
Special guests recruited to lead discussions included the South Australian premier at the time Jay Weatherill, former Australian prime minister Bob Hawke, former UniSA vice-chancellor Denise Bradley and Nasa administrator Charles Bolden. Lloyd says the event reminded him of a charity telethon, the highlight of which was Bolden鈥檚 segment about the importance of organisational culture.
鈥淐harlie is talking in his kitchen in Washington DC,鈥 Lloyd recalls. 鈥淎 graduate student chimes in to ask a question, and the conversation builds. Suggestions float up through the jam technology. At this stage, it鈥檚 a social network. People start to like the ideas.鈥
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For example, a professor proposed cultural awareness training for all students. 鈥淟ots of people would like that idea. Then there would be a conversation about what that means in the context of getting a strategic plan. How would you operationalise this? What鈥檚 the benefit of doing it? How will we know it鈥檚 successful?...It鈥檚 risky because you鈥檙e asking people what they want. And if they don鈥檛 get what they want, they鈥檙e not going to be happy.鈥
Lloyd鈥檚 approach, which culminated in his 2013-2018 strategic plan, Crossing the Horizon, was perhaps the antithesis of the managerialism increasingly decried in endless academic complaints about agendas imposed from the top 鈥 and often outlined in strategic plans that contain 鈥渁 lot of fairly empty words鈥, according to Melbourne economist Jamie Doughney.
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Doughney, formerly a staff-elected member of the governing council of Victoria University (VU), says that the primary driver of most strategic plans is the leadership鈥檚 craving for status. And the plans鈥 defining feature 鈥 like that of the institutions whose destinies they supposedly chart 鈥 is their 鈥渟ameness鈥 鈥 both in terms of their common 鈥渇ocus on status鈥 and their 鈥渉ideous propensity to [employ] the most execrable prose known to humanity鈥.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had years of strategic planning, which becomes a bit of an industry in itself, and what is there to show for it? Essentially, what we鈥檝e got are universities that are pretty much the same,鈥 Doughney says.
Despite all this, the documents sometimes herald meaningful change. Doughney credits VU鈥檚 strategic plan for its adoption of Sweden鈥檚 鈥渂lock teaching鈥 system, whereby students study one module at a time rather than juggling several. This innovation 鈥 arguably the only real departure from the norm by an Australian university, operationally speaking, in the past decade 鈥 had its genesis in the use of strategic planning 鈥渢o transform the way the university does its teaching in light of the nature of its students and their needs鈥, Doughney says.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got this big old rusty, leaking ship that you want to turn around,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very difficult because the engine room is being asked from the bridge to pump up the revs, but the boiler room is having its morning tea and not putting fuel in the engine. You鈥檝e got most of the officers working out how their little bit of the ship can get the best advantage, and not actually helping in the process. You鈥檝e got all that happening. When a strategic direction has been put down, it helps to some degree in keeping things clear and holding the disparate parts of this rusty old vessel to account.鈥
Lloyd says that far from making UniSA a carbon copy of neighbouring institutions, its strategic plan 鈥 and the crowdsourced input 鈥 helped entrench its point of distinction as 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 university of enterprise鈥.
鈥淲ithout a strategy, you don鈥檛 get that end point,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f we hadn鈥檛 done it, we would have been like every other university. We鈥檇 be aspiring to have great research, but the research would be in pockets where you鈥檝e got individual superstars, not clusters [from which] you can build in scale and focus.鈥
Melbourne tertiary education consultant Justin Bokor notes that most universities outside the large research-intensives have to decide where to concentrate their research efforts 鈥 and strategic plans help them to do that. He cites James Cook University鈥檚 focus on tropical environments and communities, the University of Tasmania鈥檚 emphasis on maritime science, the Australian Catholic University鈥檚 prioritisation of health and education and the highlighting by the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) of innovation. 鈥淢ost universities have quite a distinct focus in their research, and [strategic plans] help articulate it,鈥 Bokor says.
Other universities base their strategy more around their reputational aspirations. One notable example is Cardiff University, whose 2012 strategic plan, The Way Forward, set a public goal of being ranked in the top 10 in the UK鈥檚 2014 research excellence framework by grade point average. In the event, it was ranked sixth: up from joint 22nd听in the preceding research assessment exercise six years earlier.
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It听took flak in some quarters for its tactic of drastically reducing the number of people whose work it submitted in order to maximise its GPA; the 62 per cent of eligible staff it submitted was the lowest in the Russell Group of large research intensives by some distance. However, in a bullish letter to 探花视频, vice-chancellor Colin Riordan defended the approach as 鈥渢ransparent, strategic and highly successful鈥.

British-born barrister Stephen Parker says that for all the cynicism about strategic plans, a university without one would incur the displeasure of its accrediting agency and governing body 鈥 not to mention its own employees.
鈥淭o deny staff such an easy topic of derision is cruel indeed,鈥 says Parker, who was vice-chancellor of the University of Canberra for nine years and is now lead education consultant with professional services firm KPMG Australia.
He says strategic plans are also the obvious place to entrench universities鈥 statements of values. 鈥淎gain, these can be derided as bland, but what would the alternative look like?鈥
Gavin Moodie, an adjunct professor with the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, says some strategic planning processes are designed to elicit outsiders鈥 perspectives. But most are internally focused, seeking to mobilise academics to adopt new directions.
鈥淭he internally directed strategic plans tend to be very dull reading for outsiders, and often convey little to external readers,鈥 Moodie says. 鈥淏ut seemingly anodyne language almost always has heavy symbolic significance, signalling changes that are significant to insiders.鈥
William Locke, a former deputy director of the Centre for Global Higher Education, used to 鈥渄econstruct鈥 businesses鈥 strategic plans while teaching strategy at the UCL Institute of Education in London. 鈥淐learly there is a need for planning and smart objectives and timescales and all the rest of it,鈥 says Locke, now director of the Melbourne Centre for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Melbourne.
But he says that the real strength of the plan is in the process, not the finished product. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 stop communicating about it once you publish it. Otherwise people will literally put it on the shelf and forget about it. You need to encourage and foster strategic thinking throughout an organisation, not just at the top, so that people can think strategically in their everyday [roles] 鈥 looking for opportunities, understanding the purpose of the university and whether something might fit in or not.鈥
Locke says that a published plan plays a vital role in anchoring staff鈥檚 thinking. 鈥淵ou need to have a common reference point, but it鈥檚 more about developing a capability. We used to talk about strategy as a compass rather than a set of directions on a map. You don鈥檛 know what the terrain鈥檚 going to be later on in the journey, but you need to know roughly what direction you鈥檙e going in. It doesn鈥檛 mean everybody鈥檚 doing the same thing but they鈥檙e moving in the same direction.鈥
Rufus Black, vice-chancellor of the University of Tasmania, agrees that detailed plans are necessary to 鈥渒eep things aligned鈥. But a reference document isn鈥檛 enough: staff must live and breathe the plan.
Black says that without staff buy-in it would have been impossible to implement听his university鈥檚 vision of becoming an evolving 鈥渞egionally networked鈥 institution, moving away from a Hobart-focused 鈥渉ub and spokes model鈥 to invest greater capability in the smaller campuses of the island鈥檚 north. 鈥淯nless people are involved in the process, the deeper shifts are very hard to achieve,鈥 he says.
鈥淭hey invite some very challenging questions about priorities, all the way down to what we focus on and how we do things. To get that to happen, people need to own the question themselves. The only way you can get deep change is if staff at all levels are thinking about it.鈥
In 2011, Black, who spent nine years as a partner with business analysts McKinsey and Company, conducted a comprehensive review of accountability and governance in Australia鈥檚 defence department. He recommended sweeping changes including an 鈥渆nterprise-wide corporate plan鈥 aligned with individual performance agreements and simplified documentation at the business unit level.
鈥淭hree layers below the top of the defence department, you struggled to find the strategic goals in people鈥檚 individual work plans,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he idea that strategy was going to reshape things was never going to work. In big organisations, it鈥檚 amazing how short a distance you often need to go from the top before what you鈥檙e trying to direct is no longer translating into what people are doing day-to-day.鈥
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Now Black has something similar in mind for his university, with its strategy to be distilled into 鈥渁 simple one-page people plan鈥 for every staff member. 鈥淚t has a maximum of five, and ideally three, key things that they鈥檙e [to be] focused on. They won鈥檛 remember a detailed strategic plan, but they will remember a small set of orienting ideas. It has to be simple enough, and it has to translate.鈥
Sandro Galea, dean of Boston University鈥檚 School of Public Health, says it is also important to give staff feedback on the concrete changes that stem from strategic plans. 鈥淚 think there is deep scepticism among faculty in particular, and perhaps also among staff, that schools hold themselves to these plans,鈥 he says.
Galea presents to staff each year about progress against the school鈥檚 鈥渧ery specific鈥 strategic plan. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 not making progress on something, people say, 鈥榳hy are we not making progress?鈥 [It鈥檚 up to] me as leader of the school to be clear about it.鈥
But in many cases, the most elusive achievement is not progress but retreat. 鈥淭he hardest thing about a strategic plan is not what you choose to do, but what you choose to stop,鈥 says Attila Brungs, vice-chancellor of UTS. And, as KPMG鈥檚 Parker puts it, any effort to bankroll newly identified priorities by closing existing programmes always听鈥渂ring the heavens down鈥.
However, such measures are comparably rare in strategic plans, Parker adds: most plans focus on adding rather than substituting activities. This is in part due to the long lead times required to close down many university activities. For instance, 鈥渋f you want to exit from a degree, you may have students in all three years and incoming students who鈥檝e already applied. You might have professional accreditation issues.鈥
Exacerbating these hindrances is what Parker calls universities鈥 鈥渃apacity for internal resistance鈥. He says this can be partially resolved through articulating performance metrics that outline clear expectations for courses or other university activities. 鈥淔irm management鈥 is also essential, ideally with the backing of the governing body.
But sometimes governing council members become part of the problem, actively lobbying management to retain some activity earmarked for the axe. Parker says that most vice-chancellors have experienced such pressure at one time or another: 鈥淭he media often lap it up. They like the drama. In other organisations, if people don鈥檛 like a proposed change, they just have to put up with it.鈥
Parker is reminded of a line uttered by Gene Hackman鈥檚 submarine commander in the film Crimson Tide: 鈥溾榃e鈥檙e here to preserve democracy, not to practise it.鈥 Frankly, I think universities could take a message from that.鈥 He says universities are undergoing a general drift towards firm management, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 painfully slow鈥. In its absence, the new directions outlined in strategic plans often lack adequate resourcing, leading staff to 鈥渓ose confidence in strategic planning. They don鈥檛 think things will be different at the end of it all.鈥

Boston University鈥檚 Galea says universities face 鈥渁 real challenge鈥 from programmes that use up resources despite being tagged for closure. 鈥淯ltimately, the way universities really shed areas is through attrition, and through growth of other areas,鈥 he says.
But UTS鈥 Brungs says strategic planning processes can foster this sort of renewal by 鈥済etting people from across the organisation to talk about what we need to do. Then people start to self-select what they do or don鈥檛 do on a daily basis. It becomes a mentality. Faculties proposing a new course will [ask themselves:] 鈥楧oes it fit with where we want to go?鈥 It also helps clarify the partners we work with 鈥 the areas, the sectors, the companies. People sort of migrate towards those areas, and other ones fall by the wayside.鈥
Brungs 鈥 who, like Tasmania鈥檚 Black, worked at McKinsey and Company 鈥 says the execution of a strategic plan is arguably more important than the plan itself. 鈥淵ou can have all the strategy words you can eat,鈥 he says. 鈥淯nless you execute against it, it鈥檚 irrelevant.鈥
Stephen Trachtenberg, professor emeritus and former president of George Washington University in Washington DC, says any university leader who fails to produce a strategic plan at some point will be considered 鈥渋rresponsible鈥. Failing to implement it is equally unacceptable. But even successfully devising and implementing a strategy garners a university leader little credit.
鈥淚f you ultimately execute it, people say: 鈥榃hat did you expect? That was the plan,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 execute it, you鈥檙e a failure. So you make yourself vulnerable to your worst critics. You give them a cudgel with which to hit you. And yet, not to have a plan also gives them a cudgel.鈥
But the no-win dilemma was not the factor that made Trachtenberg a 鈥渞eluctant planner鈥 when he was at the helm of George Washington. Rather, it was that 鈥淚 found that plans robbed me and the institution of opportunity and spontaneity,鈥 he says.
Queensland University of Technology (QUT) vice-chancellor Margaret Sheil agrees that universities must have the flexibility to respond to significant changes in government settings or the international environment. While QUT is moving to a 鈥渞olling three-year鈥 update of its strategic plan, Blueprint, the university monitors policy developments much more frequently.
鈥淚t鈥檚 [about] being adaptable enough so that you can move quickly when need be,鈥 Sheil says.
She notes that universities鈥 鈥減ublic and inspirational鈥 strategic plans are 鈥渜uite different鈥 from their corporate equivalents in that 鈥渢hey tend not to have the kind of detailed tactical information that you might get in a business plan. [They] set the broad direction, and then [management] responds with more detailed internal planning, which we don鈥檛 publicise because that鈥檚 a different process.鈥
Queen Mary University of London鈥檚 recently published strategy promises that 鈥渄etailed enabling plans鈥 will be rolled out to help realise its aspiration to be the most inclusive research-intensive university in the world. Vice-chancellor Colin Bailey describes these 鈥渕ostly internally facing鈥 enabling plans as 鈥渓iving documents鈥 that can 鈥渇lex as needed to take advantage of opportunities or in response to external pressure, or the ever-changing national policies 鈥 driven by political agendas 鈥 affecting universities and the education sector more generally鈥.
However, Melbourne鈥檚 Locke says a more enduring form of external pressure is blunting the impact of strategic plans. Rampant casualisation in the higher education systems of both Australia and the UK 鈥 driven by financial uncertainties in both systems 鈥 means that universities are increasingly staffed by people on short-term contracts. This diminution of long-term ties to a particular institution inevitably erodes organisational culture, Locke says, citing a phrase attributed to management guru Peter Drucker: 鈥淐ulture eats strategy for breakfast. If your culture is not in tune with your strategy, it鈥檚 not going to happen.鈥 But such tuning is very difficult when the personnel that embody it are in a state of constant flux.
In this respect, Locke says, universities could learn from business: 鈥淪ome companies are very aware of their cultures, their people. You could describe it as being values-led. It鈥檚 thinking about who delivers the strategy 鈥 the people who work for you. Some companies do that very well. I don鈥檛 think many universities do it so well.鈥
In that regard, UniSA鈥檚 Lloyd is not the only one to see consultation as crucial. For Trachtenberg, too, it is key to avoiding the common fate of strategic plans: to 鈥渆nd up sitting on shelves collecting dust鈥.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to take people with you,鈥 he says. In particular, 鈥測ou鈥檝e got to bring the faculty along, because they can kill you. Faculty will cut you off at the knees if you don鈥檛 find a way for them to have some sense of ownership.鈥
Even then, though, partial execution of their plans may be the best that university leaders can hope for, given circumstances鈥 habit of intervening.
鈥淲e make plans based on our assumptions of the future,鈥 Trachtenberg says. 鈥淢an plans 鈥 and God laughs.鈥
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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com
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Print headline: The best-laid plans
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