Yessir.  

One of my favourite stories was working with a local health board to do just 
that.  There was lots in their annual plan that had already been decided but 
there were several areas of emerging strategy that needed to be looked at 
including labour relations, policy development, Human Resources and something 
else.  

We prepared the news wall with these four categories as sections, and then 
another section called “other"

We opened space with the board and staff of the organization and the sponsor 
said :you can have any conversation you like, but if you want ideas included in 
the strategic plan, please place your summaries of discussion in the right 
buckets.

We met for a day, and the news wall categories all got populated.  

On day two, we cam back and the reports were all typed up by category.  In each 
corner of the room we had one of the four categories.  Folks were invited to go 
to anyone of the categories, review the summary of discussions from the day 
before and make some sense of it, coming up with a set of recommendations that 
should be incoorporated into the strategic plan.  They knew that the Board 
would have the final say over what went into the plan, but Board members were 
also in these discussions.  Law of Two Feet applied.  

Spent the whole morning in these discussions, finished with each of the four 
groups reporting on their recommendations.  As I recall the Board didn’t do 
much alteration of what was created.

The “other” category consisted of a couple of reports from sessions where there 
staff were just thinking about ways to improve the workplace culture.  It was 
easy for the Executive Director to later sit down with the convenors of those 
sessions to discuss supporting their leadership on some of the ideas.  

Was a great design and one I haven’t had the chance to repeat all that often, 
because most organizations think that strategic planning needs to be a lot more 
controlled than that.

Chris

> On Aug 8, 2019, at 5:05 PM, Jake Yeager via OSList 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> Has anyone ever used OST 1) to develop a mission and/or vision statement or 
> 2) to conduct strategic planning? If so, how did it go? Any recommendations?
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> Much love as always,
> Jake
> 
> P.S. Hope to see you at WOSonOS so I can thank you in person! :)
> ________________
> 
> When the mind is quiet, the sun of your heart will shine once again, and you 
> will be free of problems.
>  - Robert Adams 
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