Strategy Talk: Can Strategy Be
Decisive and Flexible?
Dear Ken,
My company has a visionary
leader who resists the notion of strategy. He believes it will box him in, and
points to our years of success in building a profitable, growing business by
focusing relentlessly on execution guided by a big-picture vision. But as we’ve
become a larger company, our people feel whipsawed by priorities that seem to
change daily, and there’s a growing call for some stability in the company’s
strategic direction. Is there a practical solution to this?
—Stymied
by Instability
Dear Stymied,
The solution begins with
striking the word strategy from your vocabulary, at least as
long as your current leader is in charge. Many words come loaded with
preconceived notions. For some (such as me), having a great strategy is the
prerequisite to sustained execution excellence. But for others (such as your
leader), the word connotes either a shelved PowerPoint presentation that will
never be used or a straitjacket that stunts the company’s ability to maneuver.
The odds that you’ll be able to change his perspective are very low. Instead, I
would focus on the need for clarity about the choices that most affect your
company’s ability to execute.
Great execution requires a
smoothly running organization, which requires that all employees and leaders
know what they are supposed to be doing and why they are supposed to be doing
it. This demands clarity about what the company is supposed to
be doing, which is possible only when a company’s leaders are able to speak
with one voice about the choices that guide a company’s execution: its target
customer, the value proposition behind its products and services, and the
market-leading capabilities it must have to be better than any other at
delivering that value to its target customer. You don’t have to make the case
to your leader that the company needs a strategy, just that sooner or later
your company’s top leaders will need to make differentiating choices in these
three areas, and these choices must be well understood throughout the
organization.
But that alone will not be
enough. You’ll also have to convince your leader that being deliberately
decisive about a company’s essential choices does not have to come at the cost
of its flexibility to respond to attractive opportunities. If anything, such
decisiveness will usher in even better opportunities,
because everyone will have a strong sense of what to look for — and
because solid execution (based on clear choices) will always open up new
options for the company.
One effective trick I’ve seen (with thanks to Mark Gillett at
Silver Lake) for making this case is to distinguish between “stated” and
“working” choices. Stated choices are fully communicated to employees, and
provide a sense of stability in the company’s direction — which, again, is
crucial to an organization’s effectiveness. A company’s leaders always have the
prerogative to evolve its stated choices when a fundamental change in its
situation merits doing so. But without a clear statement of the company’s
current choices for its target customer, value proposition, and leading
capabilities, people across the organization — from sales and marketing to
product design, R&D, manufacturing, HR, legal, and so on — will rightly
feel unclear about how they can best support the company’s execution.
Working choices are for leaders and their teams to deliberate
privately before decisions are broadly communicated. These are open issues and
opportunities whose resolution might change the company’s stated choices. By
operating with this distinction, the company can provide clarity to the
company’s organization and preserve its flexibility at the same time.
For earlier-stage companies, being clear and decisive about your
essential choices is particularly difficult because you are still discovering
what they should be. But the best way to discover them is to take a stab at
them, learn in the real world what works and doesn’t work, and evolve
accordingly. If you don’t, every opportunity will seem to be a good one, thus
sending the company down different paths in response to whatever appears on the
horizon. Perhaps worse, not being decisive — if only conditionally — will
prevent you from knowing where you should be looking for the best
opportunities. Having both stated and working choices enables such companies to
explore and execute at the same time.
For more established
companies, the challenge is different. They risk having their choices become
stuck in whatever they have been doing all along regardless of how customers,
competitors, technology, or regulation evolves. This is both the effect and
cause of a kind of corporate myopia wherein opportunities and imperatives to
innovate are missed, and a form of corporate drift in which the company’s
essential strategy choices passively evolve without forethought and
deliberation. The myopia makes a company fall behind in an ever-changing world,
and the drift produces a lack of clarity in the organization. Together, they
inevitably make execution an exercise of running harder to stay in the same
place. But having a combination of stated and working choices solves this
problem, because the former forces subconscious strategy to the surface, and
the latter shines a light on those issues and opportunities that require
strategic innovation.
Your leader resists strategy because
he fears he’ll lose the flexibility to change his mind, and the company’s
direction, if warranted by new developments. Your solution is to argue for
clarity about the most important choices that will guide the company’s
priorities, lower-level decisions, and actions — and for clarity on the issues
and opportunities that he and his team should be working on in order to keep
pace with an always-changing world. With this understanding, the company is
both anticipating and responding to how its direction should evolve in a
deliberate way. That’s how you get the benefits of having both a decisive and
flexible strategy without having to utter the word to someone who cannot
stomach it.
Ken Favaro
https://www.strategy-business.com/blog/Strategy-Talk-Can-Strategy-Be-Decisive-and-Flexible?gko=32ae7&utm_source=itw&utm_medium=20180328&utm_campaign=resp
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