
While the science of strategy's perspective is extremely useful in planning, planning is only possible where people are working together. The coordination of planning is necessary within organizations. Planning allows organizations to duplicate their internal processes and perfect them. Planning allows different organizations to work together efficiently.
Planning requires developing a series of steps to produce a well-defined result. You plan for what you can control. Planning requires people working together. A complete set of knowledge is required for planning. You must know what raw materials you need, how to transform them, and exact what the end product will be. This assumes control of resources, tools, and raw materials. In the science of strategy, we call this "established knowledge" in "a controlled environment." Factories, offices, and supply chains are controlled because everyone agrees on the goals and responsibilities.
Planning is a linear process. Starting with a raw state and, step-by-step, transforming that raw condition into a finished product. Each step performs a specific role in that transformation. While some steps might have to be repeated, the process moves in only one direction, from raw to finished.
Planning in controlled environments is not only useful but necessary. In controlled environments, plans are shared to eliminate waste and improve efficiency. People working at one stage in the process know what to expect from earlier stages. Each stages input and output can be measured. The planned steps results in a predictable outcome. Control means that production meets prediction as planned.
The problem starts with the complexity and chaotic nature of information in the outside environment. We cannot precisely know what forces are shaping external conditions, the action others may take to affect the situations, or even the precise effect of our actions.
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Most of all, however, we cannot plan the opportunities that are constantly created by change. This is the boundary beyond which