Conversely, weโve found that one of the most costly strategic blunders is failing to make the most of victories, failing to fully realize the flywheel effect.
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When an organizational bias for action drives doing, often thinking falls by the wayside.
It contended, โAll too much of what is put forward as strategy is not. The basic problem is confusion between strategy and strategic goals.
Unless leadership offers a theory of why things havenโt worked in the past, or why the challenge is difficult, it is hard to generate good strategy.
A great deal of strategy work is trying to figure out what is going on. Not just deciding what to do, but the more fundamental problem of comprehending the situation.
Here, as in so many situations, the required actions were not mysterious. The impediment was the hope that the pain of those actions could, somehow, be avoided. Indeed, we always hope that a brilliant insight or very clever design will allow us to accomplish several apparently conflicting objectives with a single stroke, and occasionally we are vouchsafed this kind of deliverance.