Pharmaceutical Market Europe • May 2022 • 15
MAXINE SMITH
Pausing to question the data being used to inform decisions is invaluable in creating better strategy
How many times a day do you think you ask a question? 20, 50, 100 times? More? Many of the questions that we should spend more time asking, while also taking more time to explore the potential answers, start with ‘why’.
A quick Google search provides any number of links for the critical questions we should be considering when building a strategic plan, defining a competitive plan, developing a resource plan and more.
The majority encourage us to think about:
We need the right people to help ask these better questions. We need to include team members who bring specific expertise and knowledge and those who have some history of the brand/customers/patients/disease, etc. We also need to bring in people who know nothing but who have a natural curiosity and investigative leanings and can approach the challenge in a different way, unhampered by existing knowledge – for these people, all things are possible. Ideally, we would sprinkle in a couple of others who excel in listening, and then delivering, a really succinct and impactful summary to the group to help keep the discussion on track. These latter two groups of participants are often forgotten or invited at the last minute and then can’t attend, which can mean the same questions are asked and the level of challenge in the discussion and the success of the outcome are ultimately limited.
To ask better questions, we need to make sure that we have the time to explore the validity of the possible answers. No one wants to be the person who asks a killer question in the last ten minutes of a 30-minute meeting, when most attendees have to leave on time. Equally, having only a short space of time for the group to ruminate on the challenge means that brainstorms are limited, no tangential options are explored and there is very limited time for any ideation techniques to be used. So we end up in the same place as our first step – the success of the outcome is limited.
Three important techniques are:
Maxine Smith is a Director at Uptake Strategies