The scene is familiar: months of analysis, workshops, and polished presentations — followed by a strategic plan that quietly disappears into a drawer. Not because the strategy was wrong, but because it was never truly executed.
The greatest enemy of strategy is not competition; it is the gap between decision and action. Too many organizations confuse defining a strategy with changing how the business actually operates.
Across growth initiatives, M&A processes, and complex integrations, one pattern consistently emerges: when strategy is designed far from the business, without clear ownership or difficult trade-offs, execution inevitably fails
What works is surprisingly simple but rarely easy: ruthless prioritization, clear decision ownership, teams involved from the start, and real follow-up focused on outcomes rather than bureaucracy.
If strategy does not change conversations, decisions, and behaviors, it is not a strategy — it is merely an intention.
