- Plan
:"For other uses, and for specific types of plans, see
Plan (disambiguation) ."Informal or ad-hoc plans are created by individuals in all of their pursuits. Structured and formal plans, used by multiple people, are more likely to occur in
project s,diplomacy ,career s,economic development ,military campaigns,combat , or in the conduct of otherbusiness .It is common for less formal plans to be created as abstract ideas, and remain in that form as they are maintained and put to use. More formal plans as used for business and military purposes, while initially created with and as an abstract thought, are likely to be written down, drawn up or otherwise stored in a form that is accessible to multiple people across time and space. This allows more reliable collaboration in the execution of the plan.
Planning
To organize a series of actions to achieve a specified outcome.
The term planning implies the working out of sub-components in some degree of elaborate detail. Broader-brush enunciations of objectives may qualify as metaphorical
roadmap s.Planning literally just means the creation of a plan; it can be as simple as making a list. It has acquired a technical meaning, however, to cover the area of
government legislation andregulation s related to the use of resources.Planning can refer to the planned use of any and all resources, as in the succession of
Five-Year Plan s through which the government of theSoviet Union sought to develop the country. However, the term is most frequently used in relation to planning for the use of land and related resources, for example inurban planning ,transportation planning , and so forth.Thus, in a governmental context, "planning" without any qualification is most likely to mean the regulation of
land use . See alsozoning .Quotation
:"Plans are of little importance, but planning is essential" --
Winston Churchill :"Plans are nothing; planning is everything."--
Dwight D. Eisenhower :"No battleplan survives contact with the enemy." --
Helmuth von Moltke the Elder Methodology
The discipline of planning has occupied great minds and theoreticians. Concepts such as
top-down planning (as opposed to bottom-up planning) reveal similarities with thesystems thinking behind theTop-Down Model .The subject touches such broad fields as
psychology ,game theory ,communication s andinformation theory , which inform the planning methods that people seek to use and refine; as well aslogic andscience (ie methodological naturalism) which serve as a means of testing different parts of a plan for reliability or consistency.The specific methods used to create and refine plans depends on who is to make it, who is to put it to use, and what resources are available for the task. The methods used by an
individual in theirmind orpersonal organiser , may be very different from the collection of planning techniques found in a corporate board-room, and the planning done by aproject manager has different priorities and uses different tools to the planning done by anengineer orindustrial designer .Types of plan
The most popular ways to describe plans are by their breadth, time frame, and specificity. however, these planning classifications are not independent of one another. for instance, there is a close relationship between the short-and long-term categories and the strategic and operational categories.
Examples of plans
* The
Schlieffen Plan
* TheFive-Year Plan system in the formerSoviet Union
* TheMarshall Plan
*Plan de Ayala
*Plan de Casa Mata
* Plan de Córdoba
*Plan de Iguala
*Plan de San Luis Potosí
* U.S. plan to invade Iraq
*marketing plan
*business plan
*battle plan
*site planning
*health plan ee also
*
critical path method
*PERT
*planned unit development
*roadmap
*strategy
* tactics
*automated planning
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