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Tips for developing your
strategies
Try these tips when you
develop your strategies.
- Make sure they help you
reach your objective. You might want to link
strategies to each part of your
objectives.
- Check them against the
issues you identified so that all important
issues are addressed.
- Think about timing and
priority.
- Think about how the
strategies and actions fit together, how
combinations work and whether some reinforce
others, and what order is important.
- Look for strategies and
actions that are 'strategic'. These are the ones
that help achieve a number of objectives
simultaneously, or require the least
resources.
It often helps to ask some
questions.
- How will the proposed
strategy change the place?
- What will be the effect
on the significance of the place? Is this
acceptable?
- Are the strategies
feasible? What resources do they require (this
includes not only things like people, money,
materials, equipment and facilities, but also
things you can't see-time, knowledge, skill,
political influence, status, energy, control
over information)?.
- Is the strategy adequate?
Is it likely to have enough impact on the
problem to make it worth doing?
- Check if the strategy
fits the conservation principle - 'as much as
necessary, as little as possible?' and the other
conservation
principles
- Is the strategy likely to
be effective in achieving our
objectives?
- Is the strategy realistic
and efficient? Will the result be worth the
cost?
- What kind of positive and
negative effects will the strategy have? By
being focused you can reduce the time and
resources spent on issues that may not be
critical or actions that might be limited in
their effectivenesss.

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