Winning strategy needs to reflect the environment that companies operate in today, with new options to consider and new challenges to resolve. To achieve that, the process to develop strategy should evolve around six mutually reinforcing principles tailored to the new context.
Recently we asked over 100 CEOs to name the biggest challenges they face today. Many of them pointed to the same few themes: growing uncertainty, changing stakeholder expectations, unpredictable political pressures, and keeping pace with the growing power of new technologies that create both opportunity and risk.
That’s why we set out to describe strategy now—to highlight some of the new global and marketplace realities facing business leaders and link them to a new approach to creating strategy that we believe will yield better results.
Because a new way is needed, better matched to the challenges of today. If the world is moving fast, strategy needs to be agile. If the challenges are complex, strategy needs to be inclusive. If the future is uncertain, strategy needs to be resilient. And if the status quo is being serially disrupted by powerful new technologies, strategy needs to be bold.
Just as the world around business and markets has shifted in recent years, so too has the marketplace itself, creating new options for strategists to consider and new challenges to resolve as they consider how to create and capture value today. Four stand out:
Winning strategy today needs to reflect the fast-paced, disruptive environment that companies operate in, while managing the hard tension between commitment and flexibility in markets that are changing rapidly. To achieve that, the process to develop strategy should evolve around six mutually reinforcing principles tailored to the new context:
The pace and extent of change now—geopolitical, economic, technological, environmental, and more, all at once—make it urgent to consider the options available to organizations as a cohesive, mutually reinforcing set of choices.
So, where to start? Perhaps by considering a few questions whose answers can point to practical options for next steps:
Good results will likely require sustained effort, often in collaboration with stakeholders and partners, each of whom will need to be mobilized toward a more robust system for strategy development. The result, though, can be a strategy process better prepared to meet the challenges we anticipate will confront business leaders for the remainder of this decade. Because despite all that has changed, good strategy has never been more important. It’s the evolving process for getting there that defines strategy now.