Standing Plans
Standing plans consist of policies, procedures, and
regulations. They exist to guide you in the absence of
higher authority. They enable you to make rational,
informed, consistent decisions and plans without
constantly consulting higher levels of command.
Standing plans exist until canceled or changed by higher
authority.
POLICIES. Policies are an expression of top
managements attitudes toward specific actions or
events. You are required to abide by Navy policies
whether or not you agree with them. Examples of policy
are equal opportunity programs, promotion policies,
fraternization, and zero tolerance.
PROCEDURES. Procedures establish the
sequence and accuracy required for you to accomplish
specific actions. You, as a manager, establish procedures
to accomplish many routine jobs such as check-in or
check-out, maintenance actions, preventive
maintenance, inspections, and predeployment
preparations.
When a procedure has become obsolete or requires
modification, change or cancel it! Considerable time
and effort is wasted every day through compliance with
outdated procedures.
When procedures cross departmental lines, you
must coordinate with the other departments to avoid
confusion and ruffled feathers. Well-thought-out
procedures, however, will make your life easier. They
put routine matters on automatic pilot and allow you to
concentrate on managing the exception rather than the
rule. Good procedures will do the following:
Free the managers time from routine matters
Ease coordination
Save man-hours
Increase efficiency and effectiveness
Increase your control
Simplify delegation of authority
Clarify responsibility
REGULATIONS. Regulations are often used to
effect policies and plans. They provide specific direction
concerning required or prohibited actions in given
circumstances. Regulations frequently carry a penalty
for noncompliance. You are already familiar with many
regulations such as the following:
Hair length and style restrictions
Hearing protection requirements
Smoking restrictions
Safety requirements
Uniform requirements
PROGRAMS. Programs set objectives and
specify the main steps or actions you must take to obtain
them. A comprehensive program will provide
information concerning the following:
Step-by-step goals
Policies
Rules
Required physical and human resources
Strategies
PROJECTS. An effective way for you to deal with
program management is to break the program goals into
manageable projects. A project should have a clearly
defined goal with a definite beginning and end. This
approach to major or complex objectives will give you
greater flexibility in scheduling, planning, and
delegation. It allows you, the manager, to concentrate
on managing the various aspects of the program while
dividing the detail work among your subordinates. A
side benefit of this technique is increased involvement
and program support from your subordinates. People are
just naturally more interested in something they are
personally involved in because it becomes our project
instead of their project.
PLANNING STEPS
In planning, you should think ahead and select the
best course of action to reach an objective. Your plan
forms the basis for future management actions. Develop
all the steps required to conduct a smooth operation and
watch it move toward the objective. Every plan, whether
simple or complex, written or mental, contains certain
essential elements: an objective, resources, procedures,
and controls. Planning becomes easier if you follow a
logical sequence in your thinking. The following steps
may be helpful:
Analyze the objective.
Evaluate the situation.
Consider all possible alternatives.
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