A Pilot’s Lesson in Planning

DZ N684CD 12-17-2006
The author, after returning from a cross-country flight to Kitty Hawk, NC.

One the most exciting and challenging days in the life of a student pilot is the day he or she sets out on their long solo cross-country flight (“Cross-Country”).  Although the name suggests a flight across the United States of America, in this context the term Cross-Country refers to a journey that is at least 150 nautical miles, involves full stops at three different airports, and a leg of at least 50 nautical miles between two of the stops.  Although it is only one of the final steps before a pilot’s license can be awarded, it is largely viewed as the true test of a student’s ability to responsibly map out and execute a flight plan.  It requires a demonstration of skill, discipline and focus, and for this reason it is considered a rite of passage that separates real “pilots” from mere “flyers.”  Reflecting upon my own my Cross-Country experience, I can see now that the principles applied in preparing for that flight can also be applied to planning a business project.    If you search, “how to plan a Cross-Country flight” on Google, you’ll receive a number of hits, ranging from brief overviews to detailed instructor guides, but my personal favorite guide is Rod Machodo’s Private Pilot Handbook.  Below, I’ve selected the most relevant points from all of these sources, and a quote from Mr. Machodo’s chapter 14 titled “Flight Planning: Getting there from here,” and I then explain how these practices can be applied as a framework for planning out a business project:

CrossCountry2
A sectional chart

 

 

A flight plan with way-points, course headings, and estimated time marks.
A flight plan with way-points, course headings, and estimated time marks.

Flight planning is information management.  Your job is to assemble, interpret, and put to use all the information needed to safely make a flight from Point A to Point B.”  ­- Rod Machado

Identify your destination.  All general aviation Cross-Countries begin with the choice of a destination.  While you might get into your car just to go “drive around town,” with the peace of mind that if you need to get fuel or food, you will be able to find it along the way, you would never do the same with an airplane.  As a pilot, you always need to know where you’re going –even if “there” is just doing touch-and-go’s in the traffic pattern of your home base airport.  The reason you need to know where you’re going when you take-off is that the destination will govern important details such as how much fuel you will need to store, which sectional map to examine to identify waypoints, what radio frequencies you will use to communicate with other airplanes and controllers on the ground, what weather you will need to look out for en route, and what kind of provisions you should pack in the event of an emergency (e.g., are you flying over water, a desert, snow-capped mountains? Survival in each environment requires different provisions).

Planning out a project in business is no different.  As discussed during the Fall Semester, there’s a tendency to just want to dive-in and start smashing the watermelon, but just as a pilot’s choice of destination will affect such basic decisions as how much fuel he needs to load into his tanks and what map he’ll need to examine for way-point identification, the selection of a business project’s objective or “destination” is equally important.  Without knowing the objective, it’s impossible to plan out how to achieve it.

Selecting a Route.  Once a destination is selected, it’s time to choose a route.  This process begins by selecting the correct aviation map, known as a sectional chart.  Within the U.S., there are over 50 sectional charts to choose from, each focusing on a different part of the country, so again, identifying the destination is a prerequisite to choosing the right chart.  Examining the chart is an essential step because of how much information a pilot can obtain from a careful reading.  In addition to showing the location of airports, these charts also provide information on geographic formations that are visible from the air, obstructions (e.g., cell towers) that should be avoided, radio frequencies used by ground based operations and other aircraft in the region, private airstrips, airspace classification (which connotes different rules and procedures that need to be applied), and much more.

Although there is tendency to want to take the shortest route by drawing a straight line between two points on the chart, the truth is that the shortest route is not always the best.  I distinctly recall when I was planning my flight from an airport south of Washington, DC to Ocean City, MD and then down to the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, that the most direct path would take me through restricted airspace, controlled by the U.S. Navy.  Moreover, the most direct path would not bring me within eyesight of significant landmarks that would be distinguishable from the air.  As the flight involved a significant amount of flying over-water, it was essential that I select a route along which I could double-check my heading, and measure my actual progress against my predicted time-marks by looking out the window.  Accordingly, I selected a less direct route that would bring me in close range of several distinguishable landmarks to make sure I remained on course and on-time .

In business, once the objective has been identified, there’s a similar tendency to want to select the fastest route towards achieving that objective; however, the fastest route is not necessarily the best one for you or your resources.  The fastest route may be the most costly, it might involve exposure to unacceptable risk, or it might not be feasible with the resources that are available.   Moreover, like a flight plan, a project plan must include distinguishable way-points (a more colloquial term might be “mile markers”) against which the team can measure its performance and ensure it remains on course, and just like the use of time-marks the plan should layout realistic deadlines for when those way-points will be reached.  Simply telling someone “go solve this problem and come back when its done,” is not as effective as saying, “go solve this problem by completing these 10 specific steps and as you complete each step check back with me so we know we’re on point.”  Laying out a plan that allows you to break the project up into these measurable tasks and metrics will enhance your ability to track your team’s progress and report on that progress to the stakeholders,  just like a pilot tracks his progress and reports it to the controllers on the ground.

Plan for Uncertainty.  The “if” in If everything goes according to plan,” is something no pilot can afford to ignore.  Rarely does everything go exactly according to plan.  Something as mundane as the direction of the wind could change and in so doing it would alter your airspeed, heading, and even the runway you had planned to take-off or land-on, and of course there are no shortage of more major “if’s” that could alter your plans.  With this in mind, a good pilot needs to plan for contingencies (e.g., identifying alternative/emergency landing spots along his route), manage his own and his passengers’ expectations about timing and variability of conditions, and always make sure reserve fuel is left in the tank. It also means a pilot needs to consider what kind of provisions (e.g., survival gear, communication devices, food, water, temporary shelter, etc.) he might need to survive in the event he is forced to put the plane down along his route.

While some business projects are couched as “do or die,” “bet the company,” or even “get it done, no matter the cost,” projects, every plan needs to consider what resources are required to achieve the objective, whether these resources are available, and what contingencies should be put into effect if certain scenarios arise.  While all business environments may not be as unpredictable as the weather, relying on a blind belief that “everything will go as planned” in your industry is no small folly.  Accordingly, a good plan must at least acknowledge the points that are uncertain or that could be variable, and consider what should happen if those variables change.

Executing.  Executing a flight plan properly requires skill, discipline, and flexibility.  A pilot needs to be (a) skilled at maintaining his desired heading, speed, altitude, and communications while also on the lookout for incoming traffic and obstructions; (b) disciplined at checking his progress along his route, clocking in at regular intervals to measure changes in both the internal performance of his plane (e.g., engine RPMs) and the effect of outside forces (e.g., head or tail winds) on his progress; and (c) flexible in his ability to deviate from the plan as new information comes to him (e.g., materialization of a summer thunderstorm directly in his flight path).  This last point on flexibility is particularly essential because one of the biggest causes of general aviation accidents is a disease known as “get-home-itis,” wherein the pilot becomes so focused on the idea of getting home that he may compromise his normal risk tolerances and decide to try to fly through bad weather or mechanical failures in an effort to “just get home” rather than divert to another airport or delay his departure.  Get-home-itis is characterized by a loss of sight of the big picture, which is to stay alive and well.

In business, the proper execution of a plan also requires this combination of skill, discipline, and flexibility.  The skill of coordinating of team members  and the discipline to follow-up with each of them to make sure a project is meeting its way-points on-time and on-budget are essential, but again, flexibility is particularly important.  There are countless examples of companies that became so consumed with a project and the sunk costs associated with it that they were unwilling to cut their losses before it was too late.  The formulation of a plan is essential to achieving an objective, but sometimes the plan needs to be changed, and sometimes the individual objective may even need to be modified, so that it remains consistent with the company’s overall goal.  No matter how good your plan executed, it will never be viewed as a success if it undermines the big picture objective of your company.

Conclusion.  All too often, people are inclined to think of planning as a static, stagnant, and un-dynamic process.  The prevalence of phrases like “analysis paralysis” in the business suggest a lack of respect for putting in the time and energy necessary to develop a proper plan from the start; many people -desperate to start “taking action” – prefer to smash the watermelon first and ask questions later.  This demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding for what planning is and how it should be done.  Mr. Machado’s assertion that when you plan, “your job is to assemble, interpret, and put to use all the information needed” to achieve your objective, beautifully explains that planning is an active process.  It’s not static or stagnant and it’s not something you do at the beginning and then never revisit –if it is you’re doing it wrong.  It’s about actively examining the goals and the steps needed to achieve them, and just as a flight plan can evolve mid-flight, business project planners should also be prepared to evolve their plans mid-project, as new information comes to them.  So the next time you get tasked with a new project, I encourage you to think of yourself as a pilot.  Identify your destination, break out your map, and begin selecting the right route for you and your resources.  When the time comes to execute, be disciplined in trying to reach the way-points and in measuring whether your reaching them on-time and on-budget, and if not, don’t be afraid to re-calibrate your plan the way a pilot might adjust his heading to account for changes in wind direction.  Above all else, avoid your own form of “get-home-itis.”  Put the objective of your project in context with the overall goal of your company.  If everything goes according to plan, you’ll be soaring above the competition, but since everything rarely goes according to plan, at least you’ll be prepared for whatever comes your way.

Solo Flight
Shaking hands with my CFI after my first solo flight. Summer 2006.

 

 

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