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1)The big lie of strategic planning strategy assessment
2) Different Approaches Firms Use to Set Strategy
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The Big Lie of
Strategic Planning
A detailed plan may be comforting,
but it’s not a strategy. by Roger L. Martin
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Roger L. Martin is a profes-
sor and the former dean at
the University of Toronto’s
Rotman School of Manage-
ment. He is a coauthor
(with A.G. Lafley) of Playing
to Win: How Strategy Really
Works (Harvard Business
Review Press, 2013).
The Big
Lie of
Strategic
Planning
A detailed plan may be comforting,
but it’s not a strategy. by Roger L. Martin
ll executives know that strat-
egy is important. But almost
all also find it scary, because
it forces them to confront a
future they can only guess at.
Worse, actually choosing a
strategy entails making deci-
sions that explicitly cut off possibilities and options.
An executive may well fear that getting those deci-
sions wrong will wreck his or her career.
The natural reaction is to make the challenge
less daunting by turning it into a problem that can
be solved with tried and tested tools. That nearly al-
ways means spending weeks or even months prepar-
ing a comprehensive plan for how the company will
invest in existing and new assets and capabilities in
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but also very long. The length of the list is generally
constrained only by affordability.
The third element is the conversion of the ini-
tiatives into financials. In this way, the plan dove-
tails nicely with the annual budget. Strategic plans
become the budget’s descriptive front end, often
projecting five years of financials in order to appear
“strategic.” But management typically commits only
to year one; in the context of years two through five,
“strategic” actually means “impressionistic.”
This exercise arguably makes for more thought-
ful and thorough budgets. However, it must not be
confused with strategy. Planning typically isn’t ex-
plicit about what the organization chooses not to do
and why. It does not question assumptions. And its
dominant logic is affordability; the plan consists of
whichever initiatives fit the company’s resources.
Mistaking planning for strategy is a common
trap. Even board members, who are supposed to be
keeping managers honest about strategy, fall into it.
They are, after all, primarily current or former man-
agers, who find it safer to supervise planning than to
encourage strategic choice. Moreover, Wall Street is
more interested in the short-term goals described in
plans than in the long-term goals that are the focus of
strategy. Analysts pore over plans in order to assess
whether companies can meet their quarterly goals.
Comfort Trap 2: Cost-Based Thinking
The focus on planning leads seamlessly to cost-
based thinking. Costs lend themselves wonderfully
to planning, because by and large they are under the
control of the company. For the vast majority of costs,
the company plays the role of customer. It decides
how many employees to hire, how many square
feet of real estate to lease, how many machines to
procure, how much advertising to air, and so on. In
some cases a company can, like any customer, de-
cide to stop buying a particular good or service, and
so even severance or shutdown costs can be under
its control. Of course there are exceptions. Govern-
ment agencies tell companies that they need to re-
mit payroll taxes for each employee and buy a certain
Planning typically isn’t explicit about what
the organization chooses not to do and
why. It does not question assumptions.
order to achieve a target—an increased share of the
market, say, or a share in some new one. The plan is
typically supported with detailed spreadsheets that
project costs and revenue quite far into the future.
By the end of the process, everyone feels a lot less
scared.
This is a truly terrible way to make strategy. It
may be an excellent way to cope with fear of the un-
known, but fear and discomfort are an essential part
of strategy making. In fact, if you are entirely com-
fortable with your strategy, there’s a strong chance it
isn’t very good. You’re probably stuck in one or more
of the traps I’ll discuss in this article. You need to be
uncomfortable and apprehensive: True strategy is
about placing bets and making hard choices. The
objective is not to eliminate risk but to increase the
odds of success.
In this worldview, managers accept that good
strategy is not the product of hours of careful re-
search and modeling that lead to an inevitable and
almost perfect conclusion. Instead, it’s the result of a
simple and quite rough-and-ready process of think-
ing through what it would take to achieve what you
want and then assessing whether it’s realistic to try.
If executives adopt this definition, then maybe, just
maybe, they can keep strategy where it should be:
outside the comfort zone.
Comfort Trap 1: Strategic Planning
Virtually every time the word “strategy” is used, it
is paired with some form of the word “plan,” as in
the process of “strategic planning” or the resulting
“strategic plan.” The subtle slide from strategy to
planning occurs because planning is a thoroughly
doable and comfortable exercise.
Strategic plans all tend to look pretty much the
same. They usually have three major parts. The first
is a vision or mission statement that sets out a rela-
tively lofty and aspirational goal. The second is a list
of initiatives—such as product launches, geographic
expansions, and construction projects—that the or-
ganization will carry out in pursuit of the goal. This
part of the strategic plan tends to be very organized
THE BIG LIE OF STRATEGIC PLANNING
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amount of compliance services. But the proverbial
exceptions prove the rule: Costs imposed on the
company by others make up a relatively small frac-
tion of the overall cost picture, and most are deriva-
tive of company-controlled costs. (Payroll taxes, for
instance, are incurred only when the company de-
cides to hire an employee.)
Costs are comfortable because they can be
planned for with relative precision. This is an im-
portant and useful exercise. Many companies are
damaged or destroyed when they let their costs get
out of control. The trouble is that planning-oriented
managers tend to apply familiar, comfortable cost-
side approaches to the revenue side as well, treating
revenue planning as virtually identical to cost plan-
ning and as an equal component of the overall plan
and budget. All too often, the result is painstaking
work to build up revenue plans salesperson by sales-
person, product by product, channel by channel, re-
gion by region.
But when the planned revenue doesn’t show up,
managers feel confused and even aggrieved. “What
more could we have done?” they wonder. “We spent
thousands upon thousands of hours planning.”
There’s a simple reason why revenue planning
doesn’t have the same desired result as cost plan-
ning. For costs, the company makes the decisions.
But for revenue, customers are in charge. Except in
the rare case of monopolies, customers can decide
of their own free will whether to give revenue to the
company, to its competitors, or to no one at all. Com-
panies may fool themselves into thinking that rev-
enue is under their control, but because it is neither
knowable nor controllable, planning, budgeting, and
forecasting it is an impressionistic exercise.
Of course, shorter-term revenue planning is
much easier for companies that have long-term con-
tracts with customers. For example, for business in-
formation provider Thomson Reuters, the bulk of its
Idea in Brief
THE PROBLEM
In an effort to get a handle on
strategy, managers spend thou-
sands of hours drawing up de-
tailed plans that project revenue
far into the future. These plans
may make managers feel good,
but all too often they matter very
little to performance.
WHY IT HAPPENS
Strategy making is uncomfort-
able; it’s about taking risks and
facing the unknown. Unsurpris-
ingly, managers try to turn it into
a comfortable set of activities.
But reassurance won’t deliver
performance.
THE SOLUTION
Reconcile yourself to feeling uncomfortable, and follow
three rules:
Keep it simple. Capture your strategy in a one-pager
that addresses where you will play and how you will win.
Don’t look for perfection. Strategy isn’t about finding
answers. It’s about placing bets and shortening odds.
Make the logic explicit. Be clear about what must
change for you to achieve your strategic goal.
Giant Opportunities
Encourage Bad Strategy
ompanies in many industries prefer a small slice of a
huge market to a large slice of a small one. The thinking
is, of course, that the former promises unlimited growth
potential. And there’s a certain amount of truth to that.
But all too often, the size of the opportunity encourages
sloppy strategy making. Why choose where to play or how to win when
there’s a huge market to conquer? Anybody is a potential customer, so
just go out and sell stuff.
But when anyone could be a customer, it is impossible to figure out
whom to target and what those people actually want. The results tend
to be an offering that is not captivating to anybody and a sales force
that doesn’t know where to spend its time. This is when crisp strategy
making and clear thinking about opportunities are most important.
When you’re facing a huge growth opportunity, it is smarter to think
sequentially: Determine what piece of the overall market to tackle
first and target it precisely and relentlessly. Once you’ve achieved a
dominant position in that segment, expand from there into the next,
and so on.
revenue each year comes from multiyear subscrip-
tions. The only variable amount in the revenue plan
is the difference between new subscription sales
and cancellations at the end of existing contracts.
Similarly, if a company has long order backlogs, as
Boeing does, it will be able to predict revenue more
accurately, although the Boeing Dreamliner tribu-
lations demonstrate that even “firm orders” don’t
automatically translate into future revenue. Over
the longer term, all revenue is controlled by the
customer.
The bottom line, therefore, is that the predict-
ability of costs is fundamentally different from the
predictability of revenue. Planning can’t and won’t
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make revenue magically appear, and the effort you
spend creating revenue plans is a distraction from
the strategist’s much harder job: finding ways to ac-
quire and keep customers.
Comfort Trap 3: Self-Referential
Strategy Frameworks
This trap is perhaps the most insidious, because it
can snare even managers who, having successfully
avoided the planning and cost traps, are trying to
build a real strategy. In identifying and articulating
a strategy, most executives adopt one of a number
of standard frameworks. Unfortunately, two of the
most popular ones can lead the unwary user to de-
sign a strategy entirely around what the company
can control.
In 1978 Henry Mintzberg published an influen-
tial article in Management Science that introduced
emergent strategy, a concept he later popularized
for the wider nonacademic business audience in his
successful 1994 book, The Rise and Fall of Strategic
Planning. Mintzberg’s insight was simple but in-
deed powerful. He distinguished between deliberate
strategy, which is intentional, and emergent strategy,
which is not based on an original intention but in-
stead consists of the company’s responses to a vari-
ety of unanticipated events.
Mintzberg’s thinking was informed by his obser-
vation that managers overestimate their ability to
predict the future and to plan for it in a precise and
technocratic way. By drawing a distinction between
deliberate and emergent strategy, he wanted to en-
courage managers to watch carefully for changes
in their environment and make course corrections
in their deliberate strategy accordingly. In addition,
he warned against the dangers of sticking to a fixed
strategy in the face of substantial changes in the
competitive environment.
All of this is eminently sensible advice that every
manager would be wise to follow. However, most
managers do not. Instead, most use the idea that a
strategy emerges as events unfold as a justification
for declaring the future to be so unpredictable and
volatile that it doesn’t make sense to make strategy
choices until the future becomes sufficiently clear.
Notice how comforting that interpretation is: No lon-
ger is there a need to make angst-ridden decisions
about unknowable and uncontrollable things.
A little digging into the logic reveals some dan-
gerous flaws in it. If the future is too unpredictable
and volatile to make strategic choices, what would
lead a manager to believe that it will become signifi-
cantly less so? And how would that manager recog-
nize the point when predictability is high enough
and volatility is low enough to start making choices?
Of course the premise is untenable: There won’t be
a time when anyone can be sure that the future is
predictable.
Hence, the concept of emergent strategy has
simply become a handy excuse for avoiding difficult
strategic choices, for replicating as a “fast follower”
the choices that appear to be succeeding for others,
and for deflecting any criticism for not setting out
in a bold direction. Simply following competitors’
choices will never produce a unique or valuable ad-
vantage. None of this is what Mintzberg intended,
but it is a common outcome of his framework, be-
cause it plays into managers’ comfort zone.
In 1984, six years after Mintzberg’s original article
introducing emergent strategy, Birger Wernerfelt
wrote “A Resource-Based View of the Firm,” which
put forth another enthusiastically embraced concept
in strategy. But it wasn’t until 1990, when C.K. Pra-
halad and Gary Hamel wrote one of the most widely
read HBR articles of all time, “The Core Competence
of the Corporation,” that Wernerfelt’s resource-
based view (RBV) of the firm was widely popularized
with managers.
RBV holds that the key to a firm’s competitive
advantage is the possession of valuable, rare, in-
imitable, and non-substitutable capabilities. This
concept became extraordinarily appealing to ex-
ecutives, because it seemed to suggest that strategy
was the identification and building of “core compe-
tencies,” or “strategic capabilities.” Note that this
conveniently falls within the realm of the knowable
and controllable. Any company can build a technical
sales force or a software development lab or a dis-
tribution network and declare it a core competence.
Executives can comfortably invest in such capabili-
ties and control the entire experience. Within reason,
they can guarantee success.
Focus your energy on the
key choices that influence
revenue decision makers—
that is, customers.
THE BIG LIE OF STRATEGIC PLANNING
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The problem, of course, is that capabilities them-
selves don’t compel a customer to buy. Only those
that produce a superior value equation for a particu-
lar set of customers can do that. But customers and
context are both unknowable and uncontrollable.
Many executives prefer to focus on capabilities that
can be built—for certain. And if those don’t produce
success, capricious customers or irrational competi-
tors can take the blame.
Escaping the Traps
It’s easy to identify companies that have fallen into
these traps. (See the exhibit “Are You Stuck in the
Comfort Zone?”) In those companies, boards tend to
be highly comfortable with the planners and spend
lots of time reviewing and approving their work. Dis-
cussion in management and board meetings tends to
focus on how to squeeze more profit out of existing
revenue rather than how to generate new revenue.
The principal metrics concern finance and capabili-
ties; those that deal with customer satisfaction or
market share (especially changes in the latter) take
the backseat.
How can a company escape those traps? Because
the problem is rooted in people’s natural aversion to
discomfort and fear, the only remedy is to adopt a
discipline about strategy making that reconciles you
to experiencing some angst. This involves ensuring
that the strategy-making process conforms to three
basic rules. Keeping to the rules isn’t easy—the com-
fort zone is always alluring—and it won’t necessarily
result in a successful strategy. But if you can follow
them, you will at least be sure that your strategy
won’t be a bad one.
Rule 1: Keep the strategy statement simple.
Focus your energy on the key choices that influence
revenue decision makers—that is, customers. They
will decide to spend their money with your company
if your value proposition is superior to competitors’.
Two choices determine success: the where-to-play
decision (which specific customers to target) and
the how-to-win decision (how to create a compelling
value proposition for those customers). If a customer
is not in the segment or area where the company
chooses to play, she probably won’t even become
aware of the availability and nature of its offering.
If the company does connect with that customer,
the how-to-win choice will determine whether
she will find the offering’s targeted value equation
compelling.
Probably
You have a large corporate
strategic planning group.
In addition to profit, your most
important performance metrics are
cost- and capabilities-based.
Strategy is presented to the board
by your strategic planning staff.
Board members insist on proof that
the strategy will succeed before
approving it.
Probably Not
If you have a corporate strategy
group, it is tiny.
In addition to profit, your most
important performance metrics
are customer satisfaction and
market share.
Strategy is presented to the board
primarily by line executives.
Board members ask for a thorough
description of the risks involved in
a strategy before approving it.
Are You Stuck in the Comfort Zone?
January–February 2014 Harvard Business Review 7January–February 2014 Harvard Business Review 7
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If a strategy is about just those two decisions, it
won’t need to involve the production of long and te-
dious planning documents. There is no reason why
a company’s strategy choices can’t be summarized
in one page with simple words and concepts. Char-
acterizing the key choices as where to play and how
to win keeps the discussion grounded and makes it
more likely that managers will engage with the stra-
tegic challenges the firm faces rather than retreat to
their planning comfort zone.
Rule 2: Recognize that strategy is not about
perfection. As noted, managers unconsciously feel
that strategy should achieve the accuracy and pre-
dictive power of cost planning—in other words, it
should be nearly perfect. But given that strategy is
primarily about revenue rather than cost, perfection
is an impossible standard. At its very best, therefore,
strategy shortens the odds of a company’s bets. Man-
agers must internalize that fact if they are not to be
intimidated by the strategy-making process.
For that to happen, boards and regulators need
to reinforce rather than undermine the notion that
strategy involves a bet. Every time a board asks
managers if they are sure about their strategy or
regulators make them certify the thoroughness of
their strategy decision-making processes, it weak-
ens actual strategy making. As much as boards and
regulators may want the world to be knowable and
controllable, that’s simply not how it works. Until
they accept this, they will get planning instead of
strategy—and lots of excuses down the line about
why the revenue didn’t show up.
Rule 3: Make the logic explicit. The only sure
way to improve the hit rate of your strategic choices
is to test the logic of your thinking: For your choices
to make sense, what do you need to believe about
customers, about the evolution of your industry,
about competition, about your capabilities? It is
critical to write down the answers to those questions,
because the human mind naturally rewrites history
and will declare the world to have unfolded largely
as was planned rather than recall how strategic bets
were actually made and why. If the logic is recorded
and then compared to real events, managers will be
able to see quickly when and how the strategy is not
producing the desired outcome and will be able to
make necessary adjustments—just as Henry Mintz-
berg envisioned. In addition, by observing with
some level of rigor what works and what doesn’t,
managers will be able to improve their strategy deci-
sion making.
As managers apply these rules, their fear of mak-
ing strategic choices will diminish. That’s good—but
only up to a point. If a company is completely com-
fortable with its choices, it’s at risk of missing impor-
tant changes in its environment.
I HAVE argued that planning, cost management, and
focusing on capabilities are dangerous traps for the
strategy maker. Yet those activities are essential; no
company can neglect them. For if it’s strategy that
compels customers to give the company its revenue,
planning, cost control, and capabilities determine
whether the revenue can be obtained at a price that
is profitable for the company. Human nature being
what it is, though, planning and the other activities
will always dominate strategy rather than serve it—
unless a conscious effort is made to prevent that.
If you are comfortable with your company’s strat-
egy, chances are you’re probably not making that
effort. HBR Reprint R1401F
“I regret not taking management classes.”
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8 Harvard Business Review January–February 2014
THE BIG LIE OF STRATEGIC PLANNING
8 Harvard Business Review January–February 2014
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REPRINT H03LAM
PUBLISHED ON HBR.ORG
APRIL 10, 2017
ARTICLE
STRATEGIC PLANNING
The Different
Approaches Firms Use
to Set Strategy
by Kimberly Teti, Mu-Jeung Yang, Nicholas Bloom, Jan
W. Rivkin and Raffaella Sadun
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STRATEGIC PLANNING
The Different Approaches
Firms Use to Set Strategy
by Kimberly Teti, Mu-Jeung Yang, Nicholas Bloom, Jan W. Rivkin and Raffaella Sadun
APRIL 10, 2017
What is your strategy? Most senior executives can confidently answer this question. How has that
strategy changed over time? This one usually gets a quick answer too. How do you make decisions
about changing that strategy? Now it gets much more difficult. The fact is, many senior executives
struggle to describe how they make strategic decisions. That’s a serious problem, since the process
for making strategic decisions can shape the strategy itself. Making a strategy without knowing your
process is like sailing without a compass. You are setting yourself up for a long, stressful journey.
Even worse, if you eventually reach your destination, you may not realize that you’re in the right
place.
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VIDEO THE EXPLAINER: BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY
TO VIEW, PLEASE VISIT THIS ARTICLE AT HBR.ORG
To better understand how companies really make strategic choices, we recently interviewed 92
current CEOs, founders, and senior executives. We asked each to answer detailed questions about
their approach to strategic decision making. Their replies revealed both striking variety and
underlying patterns. Here, we offer a typology of four approaches. Our results can’t say that any
single approach to strategy is always best, but we do offer some evidence that one of the approaches
is often flawed.
Four Approaches to Strategic Decision Making
Companies’ processes differed from each other in two ways. The first was whether a firm uses a high
or low level of process to make strategic decisions. That is, does it have recurring routines for
discussing strategy, triggering strategic changes, and reviewing those changes? The second was the
amount of input from other employees that the leader considers while making a strategic decision.
This factor focuses on employee involvement in decision making, not simply attendance at meetings
or post-decision communication. These two factors can exist in any pairing, and based on our
interviews, firms populate all boxes, which gives us four distinct archetypes of strategic decision
making.
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Unilateral firms are both low process and low input. They tend to have a top-down leader who makes
decisions alone. During our interviews, these individuals often had difficulty explaining their
decision-making process and the role other employees played. Interestingly, these interviewees had
two different types of attitudes: Some disliked their process and admitted that they should do
things differently, while others seemed very confident with how they made decisions. A potential
benefit for Unilateral firms is that leaders can make decisions quickly, without the constraints of
process complexity and debate. However, the bad news is that, lacking checks and balances,
Unilateral firms can make bad decisions fast. Moreover, speed is not a sure thing in a Unilateral firm:
If the top-down leader chooses to procrastinate on a tough decision, no process is there to force
timely action.
Ad Hoc firms are low process and high input. These firms do not have a codified, recurring process
that they follow every time they make a strategic change. But when a change needs to be made, the
leader pulls their team together to take action. The exact steps the firm follows and the exact people
in the room change from one decision to the next. The benefit of an Ad Hoc system is that rigid rules
don’t constrain the firm. Leaders can tailor the process to each decision by adjusting the length of
deliberations, the involved parties, and other factors. The main risk is that the firm may not learn
over time how to get better at making strategic decisions. The top leader of an Ad Hoc firm might also
use the process flexibility to exclude stakeholders who disagree with the leader’s position. This will
eliminate the debate that fuels Ad Hoc decision making and, in essence, shift the firm down to the
unilateral box.
Administrative firms are high process but low input. These firms follow rigorous processes and well-
defined routines to make strategic decisions without actually eliciting debate from other employees.
One benefit is the detailed data collection and documentation that accompanies this extensive
process. If Administrative firms are smart, they can leverage this information to improve future
decision making. But, similar to Unilateral firms, the low level of input can result in bad decisions if
leaders do not consider key information or opinions. In fact, this risk can be especially grave in
Administrative firms because the detailed process and the sheer quantity of information gathered can
act as theater, masking the lack of broad input from internal and external stakeholders.
Collaborative firms are both high process and high input. These firms have the rigorous process of an
Administrative firm, but also the engaged employees of an Ad Hoc firm. During interviews, these
leaders showed strong consistency across different types of decisions and could clearly articulate
how employees added value during the process. The detailed process ensures that the leaders don’t
miss any steps. The frequent input ensures that they don’t miss any information. However,
the inflexible system can potentially slow down decision making and prevent firms from acting on
time-sensitive opportunities. For example, Collaborative firms may inadvertently include irrelevant
parties in strategy discussions or spend too much time achieving consensus among the participants
in order to maintain engagement.
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Which Approach Should a Firm Use?
Each of these archetypes has benefits and risks, which invites a question: Where should a firm sit in
the matrix? Our interview data shows tremendous variation in archetype within each industry and
across firms of similar size, which suggests that the right archetype for a given firm depends on subtle
features of the company and its context. Our current research does not include enough data on
context and firm performance to pinpoint the conditions in which one archetype would be the
winner.
That said, our early data does make us skeptical about the Unilateral archetype. In our interviews, we
asked managers to give us a sense of where their approach stood in terms of five attributes that are
generally associated with good strategic decision-making processes, namely:
• Alternatives. Does the firm consider alternative options when making strategic decisions?
• Information. How much information does the firm use to spark debate about decisions?
• Implementation. Is a detailed implementation plan available when a decision is made?
• Learning. Does the firm study successes and failures to learn for future decisions?
• Communication. Does the firm have a clear plan to communicate changes to employees?
We then scored executives’ responses based on a quantitative rubric. The chart below shows the
percentage of total possible points that the average firm in each archetype scored on each of the
attributes. Unilateral firms scored lower on all criteria, to the point of statistical significance,
than Collaborative firms; on four of the five than Administrative firms; and on three of the five
than Ad Hoc firms. The low scores of Unilateral firms raise a red flag about this approach. If you are
using the Unilateral archetype, you should pressure-test it and consider whether it is the best option
for your firm. In contrast, the other three archetypes do not differ much in terms of the five
attributes. For example, the chances of establishing learning routines appear very similar across Ad
Hoc, Collaborative, and Administrative archetypes.
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Ultimately, the wide variation in strategy-making approaches, even within similar industries and
across organizations of similar sizes, was a real eye opener for our research team. An optimistic
interpretation of this finding is that managers have considerable leeway to choose the archetype that
best fits their specific context. A less rosy interpretation is that managers may inadvertently be stuck
with less-than-optimal approaches. Our future research will aim to shed more light on this important
question.
In the meantime, our advice to leaders is to take a hard look at how they make strategic decisions.
Where does your firm sit on the matrix? Does your approach match where you want to be, given the
pros and cons of each archetype? Does the approach fit with the demands of your market and firm?
Questions like these will show whether you need to change, and will help you start the work needed
to shift processes and culture to find a new home on the matrix.
The authors are grateful to Alek Duerksen, David Lopez-Lengowski, Michael Lynch, Meg McGuire, and
Jackie Reilly, who conducted many of the interviews and gave insightful input on the design of the survey
instrument.
Kimberly Teti is an MBA candidate at Harvard Business School.
Mu-Jeung Yang is an assistant professor of economics at the University of Washington, Seattle.
Nicholas Bloom is the William Eberle Professor of economics at Stanford University and a codirector of the Productivity,
Innovation and Entrepreneurship program at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Jan W. Rivkin is the Bruce V. Rauner Professor at Harvard Business School.
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This document is authorized for use only by MITCH PLEIS (mfpleis@gmail.com). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact customerservice@harvardbusiness.org or
800-988-0886 for additional copies.
Raffaella Sadun is the Thomas S. Murphy Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School,
where she studies the economics of productivity, organization, management practices, and information technology.
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This document is authorized for use only by MITCH PLEIS (mfpleis@gmail.com). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact customerservice@harvardbusiness.org or
800-988-0886 for additional copies.