Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 6, 2009

Purpose, Goal and objective!


It is interesting to note that how people use these terms interchangeably and loosely all across.



ITIL V3 authors didn’t help much there, anyway - they have put all the three under one heading: “Purpose/Goal/Objective” and give three different statements for each of those – which in most of the cases is impossible to differentiate from each other – at least for goal and objective.


This has triggered a lot of discussion with my colleagues students and clients. I thought of noting some of the outputs from these discussions (with all due credits to those who contributed with great ideas on this).


A google search with the terms returned more than 1,650,000 results , many of them not relevant to the point.


First, let us see some info I captured from that search – which looked logical to me, and in alignment with the outputs from the discussions I mentioned earlier:



  • A goal is a desired end result;  The reason why the (process, project, role or whatever the purpose is being written for) exists

  • Goals are broad objectives are narrow.

    Goals are general intentions; objectives are precise.

    Goals are intangible; objectives are tangible.

    Goals are abstract; objectives are concrete.

    Goals can’t be validated as is; objectives can be validated.
    (ref:)

  • Purpose is usually single, goals usually single or two. Objectives can be multiple statements – basically representing actions that will lead to achievement of the specified goal.


Now, I tried my level best to arrive at some examples (along with some thoughts that have been borrowed from friends) -


Example 1: I am deciding to start jogging in the morning from tomorrow (Not really, just imagine :-) )


The Purpose: To reduce my body weight to within ‘normal’ limits


The Goal: Reduce my body weight by 5 kgs in the next one month (not sure if this is feasible or nonsense – again, hypothetical!)


The Objectives:



  1. Jog for at least ’X’ km every day.

  2. Jog at a minimum speed of  ’Y’ kmph.

  3. Jog at least for 5 days in a week


Now, from the above example, the objectives are measurable actions that aligns with the goal that has been set, in the context of the overall purpose.


Example 2 ( A more closer one to our subject):


Organization A is planning go for ISO/IEC 20000 certification.


Purpose: To enhance customer/market credibility and image.


Goals:



  1. Achieve ISO/IEC 20000 certification for the service management by August 2009

  2. Demonstrate measurable improvement in the service delivery to customers from the initiative


Objectives:


For Goal1 :



  • Manage the complete certification initiative as a formal project, with an assigned project manager

  • Ensure planning and management of the initiative as a project with clear milestones, ensuring the completion of certification by August 2009

  • Ensure enough resources and capabilities are assigned and empowered to ensure successful completion of the project on time


For Goal 2:



  • Conduct a current state assessment and plan for measurable improvement areas and targets

  • Create a clear framework of metrics/KPIs and measurement mechanism

  • Focus on improvement actions within the initiative that will enable achievement of the metrics/KPI targets.


Makes sense? Looking back, I am not completely sure about it.


Any of you who have a better idea of fine-tuning this, most welcome. Please feel free to comment!



Posted in PR Books & Traning

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