The Story of the Three Archers
Three archers stood at the edge of a vast forest. An oracle had just completed a comprehensive assessment of their strengths and weaknesses. The oracle identified exactly what each archer needed to improve to hit the distant target that represented success.
All three archers received the same insights. All three understood what needed to change. But what happened next was entirely different.
Archer 01
Insights Without Direction
Result: Missed completely
Rebuilt his stance three ways, bought five bows, attended seminars, hired consultants, reorganized his quiver seven times. Incredibly busy. Never clear on what he was trying to achieve.
Archer 02
Direction Without Action
Result: No arrow fired
Defined a beautiful objective. Spent months refining the wording, forming committees, seeking feedback. Revised her objective eight times. No progress toward the target.
Archer 03
The Bridge Between Clarity and Action
Result: Hit the target
Clear objective. Three specific, connected initiatives. Daily deliberate action. After one year — she hit the target.
The Third Archer's Method
The third archer studied the oracle's assessment carefully. Then she did something simple but profound: she defined a clear objective, and identified the specific initiatives that would move her toward it.
Initiative 01
Master Core Fundamentals
Stance and breathing through daily practice routines
Focus techniques for consistency under pressure
Initiative 02
Modernize Equipment
Select one superior bow and invest fully in it
High-quality arrows designed for precision at distance
Initiative 03
Build Distance Mastery
Progressively challenging distance targets
Learn to adjust for wind and angle at each stage
Each initiative was specific, connected to her objective, and actionable immediately. There was no confusion about what to do. No scattered efforts. No abandoned projects. Together, they created a coherent roadmap toward the objective.
The Lesson: Why Initiatives Are the Bridge
In our previous articles, we discussed why strategic assessment gives you clarity on the current state — and why clear objectives define where HR needs to go. But objectives alone — no matter how well-crafted — will not move the needle.
Initiatives are the bridge. They answer the equally crucial question: What are we actually going to do about it?
The Three-Step HR Transformation Formula
Step 01
Strategic Assessment
Understand where HR stands today. Know which processes matter most, where capacity is insufficient, where satisfaction is low.
Step 02
Clear Objectives
Define what success looks like. Articulate ambitious but achievable HR objectives that connect assessment insights to business outcomes.
Step 03
Focused Initiatives
Identify the specific, prioritized initiatives that will move you toward those objectives. These are your arrows — and they must be fired with purpose and discipline.
What Makes an Initiative Truly Strategic?
Not all initiatives are created equal. Many organizations fail because they pursue initiatives that sound good but are scattered, redundant, or misaligned with their core objectives. Strategic initiatives share common characteristics:
Clearly Connected to a Specific Objective. Every initiative traces back to one of your core HR objectives. If it doesn't, it doesn't belong.
Prioritized and Sequenced. You don't pursue all initiatives simultaneously. You sequence them strategically, understanding which must come first.
Scoped for Impact. Each initiative is sized appropriately — big enough to matter, small enough to manage and complete.
Resourced Realistically. You allocate the people, budget, and support needed to succeed.
Measured Objectively. You define what success looks like and track progress transparently.
From Objective to Initiatives: A Real-World Example
Objective: Build HR compensation and rewards capabilities to position the company as a preferred employer in a competitive talent market.
Initiative 01
Modernize Compensation Strategy
Conduct comprehensive market benchmarking
Develop competitive salary bands and positioning
Implement total rewards communication strategy
Initiative 02
Implement Integrated HR Systems
Select and deploy modern compensation management platform
Integrate with payroll and HRIS systems
Enable self-service access for employees and managers
Initiative 03
Build HR Compensation Expertise
Hire or develop compensation specialist role
Train HR team on compensation analytics and communication
Build playbooks for ongoing compensation reviews and adjustments
Each initiative directly supports the objective. They are specific enough to guide action. They can be started, progressed, and completed. Together, they create a coherent roadmap. This is how you move from understanding what needs to change to actually changing it.
The Common Mistakes Organizations Make
Mistake 01
Too Many Initiatives at Once
Like the first archer, organizations pursue 10, 15, or 20 initiatives simultaneously. Nothing gets completed. Progress is invisible.
Mistake 02
Initiatives Unconnected to Objectives
Good-sounding projects launched because someone thought they were important — but with no clear connection to strategic objectives.
Mistake 03
Initiatives Without Resources
Projects launched with aspirational goals but no budget, people, or executive support to actually succeed.
Mistake 04
Initiatives Without Measurement
Projects completed without clear metrics of success. Did it actually matter? No one knows.
Why Strategic Initiatives Define State-of-the-Art HR
The difference between traditional HR and state-of-the-art HR is not just clarity of objectives. It's the discipline to translate those objectives into strategic, prioritized, resourced initiatives that actually move the needle.
Organizations that master this three-step formula:
Deliver results predictably
Maintain employee engagement throughout transformation
Build HR credibility with business leaders
Create sustainable competitive advantage
The final lesson
The third archer succeeded not because she was more talented.
She succeeded because she understood a fundamental truth:
Clarity of direction is essential. But action with purpose is what actually wins.
Your assessment gave you insights. Clear objectives gave you direction.
But it is your strategic initiatives that will give you results.
Are you ready to define the initiatives that will turn those objectives into reality?