The Strategy BS

The Strategy BS

I became acquainted with the term “strategy” early in my career. It was daunting, made me feel inadequate and somewhat admiring of those who wielded the word easily and often. I didn’t engage too much with it because I felt I hadn’t earned the strategy (whatever it was) credentials yet.

In my next job, I rose up the ranks and had no choice but to engage with “strategy”. Because I hadn’t fully understood it yet, I adopted the accompanying mannerisms instead. The thoughtful expression, the occasional nod of agreement and sometimes made furtive comments that something wasn’t “strategic” enough.

Clearly, enough people were fooled and soon I was leading “strategy”. Now that the buck stopped with me, I had no escape but to face this damn thing. I spent hours trying to overcomplicate plans so they sounded “strategic” enough. I figured if I didn’t understand a plan, then no one else would understand it and voila, I would have nailed the strategy. It worked somewhat.

Till strategy met the voice of reason and its biggest critic-execution. My beautifully complicated strategic plans fell apart at the altar of execution. I simply didn’t understand why -?I had impressed so many with something no one understood. Shouldn’t execution have only consolidated my strategic brilliance?

Despite valiant attempts, execution refused to budge. Ugh! I hadn’t come this far to give into this inferior beast. Instead, I tweaked “strategy” and added just a little more complication. Things got worse and I was sure my low “strategic IQ” would soon be found out.

Desperate, I decided to address execution and figure out its problem with strategy.?Execution asked me some fundamental questions -

  • Why are you doing this??
  • What do you know? What don’t you know??
  • Who else needs to know??
  • How many hands on deck do you have??
  • What happens at the end??
  • And how does what happens matter?

Such basic questions but let me indulge this simple unsophisticated beast, I thought. I very patronisingly (and somewhat resentful) started answering all of execution’s questions. It took a little time because unlike strategy, I had to be simple with dumb execution.

I finally had a set of responses, boringly straightforward without a hint of anything excitingly complicated. I disdainfully handed it over to execution in a hurry to get back to the more complex (and important) world of strategy. I expected some push back, some more questions and further stalling.

In an astonishing turn around, execution said “let’s roll”. But what, how, when I stammered... And what happened to all your resentment and stonewalling of my “strategy”? Execution stepped closer to me and whispered gently in my ear -

I was just waiting for you to understand that strategy is nothing more than common sense.

#CallingItOut

Volodymyr Tsozyk

Business Development Manager at SalesNash | B2B Lead Generation Agency | Clutch Global & Champion Award

3 个月

Sandhya, thanks for sharing! Quite interesting information ??

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Dilnawaz Khan

I help Startup Founders in Fundraising & Pitching to Investors with Clarity | DM if you are struggling with Storytelling, Content and Design | Open for 1v1 Consultation, Pitch Deck Reviews and Speaking Invitations

1 年

This is such an interesting read Sandhya! Seems like everyone wants to handle "Strategy" but no one wants to "Execute"! This is such an eye-opening article, especially for people who are starting their careers or are planning to move to a "Strategy Role"! At the end of the day its the EXECUTION that matters!

Shammy Narayanan

Chief Solution Architect | 10x Cloud Certified | Founder - Celebrating Life | Adjunct Professor at VIT | Author

1 年

Well written Sandhya. More often Strategy appears to be best charade to emerge unscathed from a hi power meeting by intelligently concatenating some infrequently used English words !!

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