The Evolution of Business Strategy
by Jane Gentry and Pat Alacqua
Seth Makowsky, a mindset coach, teaches athletes how to use chess principles to gain crucial seconds in a game. He helps them learn what matters most—the king—and how to protect the king while anticipating future opportunities, detecting hidden dangers, and making fast and smart choices with that data. In a marketplace where your product, service, and your ability to innovate are king, this is a valuable metaphor for business leaders.
The days of producing a mediocre product and service while leveraging a powerful marketing engine to overcome deficiencies are over. Today’s buyer demands high-quality and innovation. This has changed what strategy means to a business leader. Businesses can no longer afford to have 5- or 10-year strategies—the market changes too quickly. Strategy now is like building the plane while you are flying it. It requires a constant cycle of innovation, listening to the marketing and adjusting. To use Makowsky’s metaphor, it means understanding what is most important to your business—the king—grasping the opportunities to innovate and differentiate and protecting your business from potential threats with an eye toward consistent plays rather than the entire game. What could this look like for your business?
1. Clear Vision Casting
All decisions about strategy should align with the vision for where the company is headed. Leadership must have clarity and agreement about the future goals of the organization. Equally important, to create organizational alignment, all employees should understand the vision and their role in helping the organization achieve it.
2. Have a Process for Choosing Opportunities and Protecting from Threats
Without a process for vetting opportunities and threats quickly, innovation slows. Make decisions on opportunities quickly be asking things such as:
Opportunities
Does this align with our vision?
Too many leaders have ‘shiny object syndrome’ chasing the latest great thing that doesn’t align with the overall vision for the organization. This is a waste of time, resources, and employee energy. All decisions in the organization should be made against the overall corporate vision.
Does this play to
our superpower?
Your superpower is not what you do, but what your company is great at: your knowledge and skills. I ran an experiential staffing firm for a period of time. Our superpower wasn’t staffing per se, but rather managing the logistics and talents of people nationwide. This served us during the pandemic when we couldn’t staff for our typical clients, so we shifted to doing COVID-19 testing.
Do we have the infrastructure to support this move, or can we ramp it quickly?
This is where innovation comes in, can you leverage your existing infrastructure to aid in the new initiative?
Is this innovative enough
to make a difference?
You may find an opportunity that is innovative, but is it innovative enough to differentiate you? If not, is it an opportunity to remove an existing roadblock to production or service in your existing strategy? If the answer to both is no, perhaps you should move on.
Threats
Is this a threat that will materially affect our position in the market?
We can sometimes be so focused on what is happening inside our organization that we notice major changes to the market too late. A client of mine who served traditional TV media waited too long to adjust the strategy to meet the digital disruption in the space. Another missed the trend of their distribution channel, their largest client segment, moving to private label. Many leaders see the trends but wait too long to course-correct.
Will this impact our ability to serve our clients?
The supply chain disruption during the pandemic caused many companies to stall in delivering to their clients. Those who moved quickly were able to fill the gap, the rest suffered until long after the pandemic was over. Seeing changes to supply chain, financing, and other areas that impact delivery, and innovating quickly is an example of building the plane while you are flying it.
3. Empower your Team
to Innovate
A culture that rewards innovative thinking and prioritizes progress not only gets ahead in the market but also has a more highly engaged and productive workforce. Employees thrive when they are clear on the company vision, have some autonomy in contributing to the vision, and know their role in getting the company closer to it. Have an internal mechanism that garners feedback and ideas from employees, especially client-facing employees.
A salesperson recently told the CEO of his organization, who is also a client of mine, ‘Customers hate the colors on our new product line.’ She asked if he had shared that with anyone in product development and he told her that it hadn’t occurred to him. Foster innovation by creating intentionality around it in your organization.
4. Listen Actively
Create a real-time feedback loop with your clients. The example of the salesperson who knew that clients hated the new product colors but did nothing with the information is a symptom of an organization without an effective feedback loop. Have multiple mechanisms for hearing from your clients. This might include regular meetings with client-facing employees, quarterly business reviews with your top clients to hear about the issues they are facing, or a social forum where you can engage with clients in real-time. Your client will experience market changes before you see them. A feedback loop will enable you to quickly assess opportunities and threats and give you the intel to seed your next innovation.
5. Evaluate and Repeat
The adage from David Kelley, founder of IDEO, “fail faster, succeed sooner” is a core axiom in the field of innovation design and the new normal for companies who wish to win in today’s marketplace. As you address opportunities and threats, move on quickly from what isn’t working and invest quickly in what is. The most innovative organizations know that failing is not a negative, but rather gets you information to seed your next innovation.
To succeed in today’s market, leaders must be hyper-focused on developing a quality product or service and continuous innovation. This requires internal mechanisms for seeing, rewarding, and testing opportunities as well as seeing and adjusting quickly to threats. Leaders who realize that failing quickly can lead to the next innovation will be those who guide their businesses to stand out. Strategy today means knowing what is most important to protect—your king—and simultaneously seeing and adjusting to opportunities and threats. It means having an overarching goal and realizing that reaching it will require a series of plays that may need adjusting along the way. Perhaps we should all take up Chess. That ability to think a second or two faster may make all the difference.
As featured contributors to the ECN Business Beacon Series, Pat Alacqua and Jane Gentry share their ‘Building to Sell’ strategy and tips which are a blueprint for fostering growth, sustainability, and self-reliance in your business. By adopting this approach, you evolve from merely generating income to building lasting wealth. Embark on a journey toward a prosperous legacy, with or without the intention to sell.
Visit OptimumValueBlueprint.com now and take the first step towards achieving peak business value.
This story originally appeared in the Q3 2024 issue of Exhibit City News, p. 32. For original layout, visit https://issuu.com/exhibitcitynews/docs/ecn_q3_2024/32.