π₯How To Drastically Improve Your Chances of Getting Managementβs Approval π₯
Jan 31, 2022Here are 8 steps you can take today to improve your sales pitch so management will approve your project and give you the resources you need.
Step 1: Craft A Better Elevator Pitch π
Often, Business Analysts need to fight for their resources and constantly engage stakeholders with support. Even if you get approval once, you may have to sell other stakeholders or remind existing ones what your plans are. It’s a rare thing for a Business Analyst to actually have a project with stakeholders who can commit their full time to requirement elicitation and validation. Without Business Analysts constantly vying for resources for their projects, it’s easy for management to move time and money to a different project and forget about your pitch.
To solve this, follow this four-step process for breaking out your talking points in a way that can grab management’s attention and hold it until you get the resources you need. By following this process, you should be able to draft your pitch clearly and in a way that appeals to management:
π Create a quick overview (or elevator pitch) about the project along with clearly stated needs, solution constraints and stakeholder requirements
π Summarize the research you performed to evaluate the project and your needs
π Provide a solution to overcome hurdles and to get the resources you need based on your research
π End with a proposed course of action and a properly calculated timeline.
The key to success with this model is flexibility. If they want you to move ahead, you can skip the summary and even solution section and go to the call to action without losing your focus.
Step 2: Adjust Your Pitch To Address Upper Management’s Concerns π
It’s hard to get senior management to pay attention to new ideas, not because the leaders are arrogant or overwhelmed, but because they are disciplined.
The executive team constantly pitches new ideas and solutions, and they need to evaluate which ones will have the biggest impact. While ten ideas might be good, they probably only have the resources for one or two, and need to identify the best ones π
As you’re crafting your elevator pitch, your primary focus needs to be on Return On Investment. While supplemental information is certainly helpful, tracking the incremental value to a business investment can be one of the top analytical motivators in your arsenal.
Within the ROI formula, there are really only two components that a BA can impact:
π Value achieved through a solution and the
π Cost of the solution.
Basing your plan around how one or both of these factors will be significantly improved can turn your passion project into a financial opportunity for any stakeholder.
Step 3: Encourage Managers To Pick Apart Your Ideas π‘
βοΈThe only way your pitch is going to gain approval across the company is if it’s bulletproof.
In this case, people who reject your plans can actually be an asset in the information-gathering phase. I recommend learning more about why these stakeholders are against your project. Even if your project is postponed or rejected this time, understanding how key managers think can help you use their logic to win them over in the future π
People tend to ask questions with specific end-goals in mind. Instead of talking objectively, employees will try to narrow the scope and promote their cause. Rather encourage managers and employees alike to try to ask open-ended questions and to be objective when talking about ideas. If this is impossible when advocating for your cause, find a co-worker mediator who can ask both parties the right questions to get all of the information on the table π
Step 4: Gain Buy-In From Team Members On Your Level π
π By picking apart your ideas to improve them, your co-workers can prepare you to address naysayers and counter their objections
π By encouraging employees to take risks, new ideas are constantly brought to the table
π When employees disagree about the best solution, both sides are forced to defend their ideas and look for better implementation plans.
While many managers strive to reduce risk and prevent disagreements, I find those two elements actually work together to move a company forward. This communal focus on learning and making tough calls make the managers more engaged in their decision-making process and in each other’s departmental objectives.
Step 5: Incorporate Feedback Across The Company π
Before you’re ready to make your pitch, make sure your plan will work at the lower levels of the company, where people will have to adapt to the changes on the front lines. I have seen countless initiatives fail because a room full of executives only listened to each other instead of actually asking what the front-line employees wanted or needed to succeed.
β By listening to lower-level employees, companies are more likely to create a funnel for new ideas to improve the company and the customer experience.
Simply asking the opinions of lower-level employees can actually increase morale and buy-in for your plan.
Many leaders worry they appear weak or incompetent when they ask employees for their assistance in a crisis. However, the opposite is true. Not only does this open up the pool of ideas, increasing the odds of landing on the right solution, but it also builds loyalty and team cohesion for your plan π₯
Step 6: Strategically Plan When You Make Your Pitch π
Once you completely have your pitch crafted, it’s time to strategically plan how you will approach management for maximum impact.
It might seem most important to deliver your pitch as soon as possible, but your boss likely has a pretty packed schedule, and if they’re not adequately prepared to listen to your idea, it will fall flat.
β By trying to tie in your pitch to another meeting or during a busy time, your ideas aren’t likely to have the impact you expect. The best-case scenario is that you’re ignored or asked to present on a later date. In the worst-case scenario, you’re flat out rejected
β Pitching at the end of the year or after your budgets are already approved can decrease your chances of getting approval
βοΈ By keeping an eye on company performance and your fiscal calendar, you can plan the best time for management to say “yes.”
Step 7: Evaluate How Much Your Audience Knows About The Project π
As you start to make your case across the company, evaluate how much jargon and technical knowledge is required to fully understand the project. You may have to tailor your pitch in a way that educates stakeholders and employees while persuading them. This is referred to as persuasive management, where you know far more about the subject matter than the team you’re leading.
As you are an expert in a complex field, there would be little benefit in seeking the input of those who are not, but team members are still able to perform individual tasks or execute certain parts of the plan.
This leadership concept applies when talking to upper management. As an analyst or mid-tier employee, you’re deeper in the weeds than most leaders. While they might have an idea about the technology, you know what’s best for it.
β This is why you end up taking on the role of educator as well as advocate for additional resources. It can be frustrating when you know more than your boss. Many corporate structures have management operating on a high level, and leaders aren’t aware of problems until their employees present them.
βοΈ I recommend working with your boss as much as you can and be respectful when communicating issues. You may face an uphill education battle, but those lessons could pay off in the long run.
Step 8: Learn How To Persuade Instead Of Demand π
Co-worker and employee buy-in will also help when it’s time to execute your approved ideas. By the time management signs off on a plan, you will have a top-notch team already familiar with your goals ready to offer their help.
πYou should be cultivating the kind of attitudes that people find attractive and lead them to want to follow you; while people respect calm detachment and a realistic assessment of the situation, they are drawn to optimism.
Conversely, if you lack the ability to persuade your co-workers on your ideas, you could face backlash when your manager starts implementing it.
πYou are more likely to win stakeholders to your side if you lead them to believe in your vision instead of relying on their bosses or those more powerful than them to dictate to them. If power changes hands and the tables turn, it could very well spell the death of your initiative.
Co-worker buy-in also helps through periods of change, as the team will work to push your initiative even if management is pausing or cutting certain plans.
There are dozens of factors working against your pitch, from co-workers who also need resources to corporate timing and budgets. However, by following this process, you can work to reduce barriers while motivating more people to lobby for your ideas π
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