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Irish Rugby is the term used to describe rugby in Ireland from mini rugby to the professional
team. It encompasses all stakeholders in rugby including the IRFU.
The term Irish Rugby is also used by the IRFU on its website but it is broader than the IRFU and is
not the domain of the IRFU.
People inherently know the ethos of rugby and can articulate the values of rugby, however
there is no overall consensus on what the values are and they are varied.
The values are implicit rather than explicit and this allows stakeholders to interpret or create
their own definitions depending on their role or focus.
The lack of clarity on values and what these mean on a day-to-day basis means that the pillars
that underpin the Irish Rugby mission and vision (purpose) are not as solid as they could be or
will need to be in the future. It is recognised by many that without its values Irish Rugby has
nothing to fall back on.
The absence of explicit values has not detracted from Irish Rugbys international success;
however it is very evident that if Irish Rugby is to achieve the full level of its potential the values
will need to be more explicit in the future. Without this Irish Rugby will at best perform at its
current good level but with all the tensions that currently exist in the sport detracting from
achieving its full potential. At worst it will perform at a weaker level.
An even worse scenario is that Irish Rugby will fail to perform at the level of its potential (and to
the level the Irish Public give it permission to) that is to be great an Irish world leader.
It is imperative therefore that Irish Rugby clearly defines what its values are and the only way to
do this is for the rugby family to engage with its constituents to discover them. It must then
communicate and live the values in all its endeavors.
The existing Irish Rugby vision Irish Rugby excelling in Irish Sport and in World Rugby has served
its purpose and in the main has been achieved. The vision has excelled at a professional level
more so than at an amateur level. Criticisms where they exist are more to do with the fact the
revised Strategic Plan & Vision was not implemented in a focused inclusive way for all levels of
the sport. This ultimately means the vision and strategy are not lived and do not guide the sport
in Ireland.
Moving forward it is essential that the IRFU & Irish Rugby puts its vision for the sport behind all
of the stakeholders that make up Irish Rugby rather than asking stakeholders to get behind a
vision created by the IRFU.
Creating a vision is not a one off project or process that gets repeated every decade. Visioning is
a way for Irish Rugby to continuously engage with its stakeholders, keep its fingers on the pulse
of what is happening from the grass roots, build a strong rugby family that creates the future it
desires.
There are many challenges in Irish Rugby, some being addressed more than others and the
emphasis is likely to be different in each province.
The challenges, which we will outline in greater detail, can be summarized under the following
headings
Finance & Sponsorship
Clubs, Schools, Youth
Provincial and National Brands
Professionalism vs Amateurism
The Game & its derivatives (15s, 7s, Tag, Touch, Mini etc.,)
Inclusion
Volunteers
Infrastructure and facilities
Supporters
It is evident that each province is working on some if not all of these issues which means at any
given time there are at least 4 groups working on every issue to a lesser or greater extent in
addition to the IRFU itself.
Resources and expertise are not being maximized at the level they need to be to address the
tensions and challenges that exist in Irish Rugby. Worse, problems and tensions are being
abdicated to others to resolve.
Irish Rugby needs to recognize that a problem for one Province or for the IRFU is a problem for
the whole sport and needs to be resolved collectively. No one Province or indeed the IRFU will
find the solution and each Province and its stakeholders are part of the overall solution.
Moving forward it is clear that existing and future challenges & tensions need to be openly
acknowledged, defined, owned and resolved collectively by the rugby family.
3. IRFU
people find ways to navigate and work in such a system. It is also inevitable that as the
organisation and sport grows tensions will exist about who has power and authority. The world,
society and organisational life have evolved enormously in the last decade with increasing
transparency and communications at peoples disposal. The IRFU needs to evolve in this new
world and move to one of facilitator if it is to help birth a new vision for Irish Rugby.
The IRFU can learn from highly successful sporting organisations and businesses heavily involved
with complex stakeholders who have reaped the benefits of transparency, honesty, consistency
in message, continuity of succession, participative leadership, and clarity of purpose and vision.
4.1 Identity
Irish rugby is made up of lots of stakeholders each striving to ensure it future existence and success.
There is a need to connect each of the individual components so that they work collectively for the
greater good of Irish Rugby to move from separateness to oneness to be unified.
This will require:
Harnessing the symbols, logos, colours, anthems, heroes, ceremonies and traditions that
differentiate Irish Rugby from other sports and other countries, authentically
Ensuring Irish rugby is accessible and diverse and representative of, all including women
Developing rugby derivatives that attract most supporters in a small population
Respecting the contribution of fans/supporters they have purchasing power
Harnessing the power of a global sport that operates at a 32 county level in Ireland
Harnessing the real power and commercial potential of the Diaspora
4.2 Information
The rugby family has a wealth of information at its disposal. It needs to shift from information being
available at an individual/role/committee level to information being available to the whole of the
system. Currently information is used as power and this detracts from the work and greater vision
to be achieved. It also means people are busy with activity rather than creating the impact that is
required. There is a need to:
4.3 Relationships
Irish Rugby needs to strengthen its relationships at all levels of the sport from clubs and schools to
the professional teams, from committee members, to paid employees that service the sport.
Ultimately each stakeholder needs to define how it can add value in partnership with the other. The
rugby family and the Irish population base are small and resources are limited, Irish Rugby needs to
maximize the resources available by maximizing relationships and energy.
Irish Rugby needs to work collectively for the greater good, to welcome diversity in opinion and find
new ways of working together. In doing this innovation will flourish and solutions will be found to
deeply embedded problems.
There must be continuous engagement and dialogue for relationships to develop and new
forums need to be created to facilitate this
The language and mindset from stakeholders must move from victim, villain and hero to
collective heroism
The IRFU needs to act as a hub that facilitates dialogue and engagement; it must act from a
transformational leadership space, building capacity for the whole.
The IRFU needs to consider to what extent its behaviours and capabilities empower
stakeholders to achieve their full potential - if it facilitates growth through empowerment or
restricts growth by having power over.
Weaker voices must be heard and given a platform e.g. women, clubs, youth etc.
The IRFU needs to continue to strengthen its performance influencing rugby policy at an
international level e.g. IRB
Irish Rugby needs to continue to tap into its past international Heroes that contributed
significantly in the sport to bridge the gap from the past to the future.
Irish rugby needs to extend its relationships in community, tapping into community resources
where there are deficiencies in club and schools e.g. sharing community resources
Does Irish Rugby agree with the IRB vision and values and priorities for the development of
rugby to 2020 Rugby, a sport for all?
Does Irish Rugby want to compete with GAA and Soccer or does it want to position itself as a
leader that can show other sports how to behave and lead?
Does Irish Rugby want to build its vision on the success of the national or provincial teams
i.e. an outcome or does it want to build its vision on something that is sustainable, with
greater reach and impact in the longer term?
How can Irish Rugby build on the success of its provincial and national teams and link this to
community?
Does Irish Rugby want to pick up on the opportunity that the Irish Public is prepared to give
it for leadership and national reputation rebuilding and reimagining?
In creating a new vision for Irish Rugby some stakeholders will have to give up roles and
responsibilities, power and status and others will have to take on roles and responsibilities. This
was clearly identified in the BCG report for New Zealand 15 years ago. In taking on or giving up
roles it is critical that the IRFU builds the capacity and capabilities of itself and its stakeholders so
that the whole sport grows.
There is an opportunity for Irish Rugby to become a movement in Ireland and beyond. It can learn
much from other movements including the Olympic Games. If Irish Rugby wants to operate in this
space it must be clear about its cause and align itself and its resources around this cause.
Currently the cause can be any number of things depending upon whether the IRFU and Irish Rugby
stakeholders are up to the challenge. It can only begin from where it is at currently and that means
strengthening some of the weaker elements within its family and committing fully to the future
vision.
Every cause has tensions but good or successful causes work at where the tensions exist and
resolve them. Ultimately a successful cause has strong values that are embodied and lived and
underpin its vision.
6. Visioning Project
Through our research we have identified that if the IRFU is to engage the Irish Rugby in a visioning
project that is ultimately a way for Irish Rugby to discover its future it must:
Have project champions that come from the professional and volunteer sides of the family;
otherwise this project will be seen as a committee initiative that will not gain momentum
and deliver its full potential
Appoint a strong steering committee that works with momentum
Identify those people who could block the progress and bring them on board
Develop an engagement process that is open, iterative and evolving
Create a process that facilitates the change that is desired
Share information with Irish Rugby stakeholders that will encourage them to become aware
of the full scale of the realities that exist and the full scale of the potential that can exist if it
is prepared to go there.