The plan violates the "Relevance" aspect of SMART plans. SMART stands for Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. In this case, simply updating laptops without considering whether the new model addresses pressing needs or improvements relevant to the employees' work may not be pertinent to the organization's goals or needs.
A CEO wants to update each employee’s laptop because a new laptop just came on the market. Unless there are other pressing needs that the new laptop meets, this plan violates which aspect of SMART plans? (1 point)
1 answer