Sameness isnât strategy. It is a recipe for mediocrity.â (Lafley and Martin, âPlaying to Winâ,
p.5)
âWinning should be at the heart of any strategy. In our terms, a strategy is a coordinated and integrated set of five choices: a winning aspiration, where to play, how to win, core capabilities, and management systems.
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It isnât. Really, strategy is about making specific choices to win in the marketplace. According to Mike Porter, author of Competitive Strategy, perhaps the most widely respected book on strategy ever written, a firm creates a sustainable competitive
advantage over its rivals by âdeliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver unique value.â Strategy therefore requires making explicit choicesâto do some things and not othersâand building a business around those choices.
Specifically, strategy is the answer to these five interrelated questions:
⢠What is your winning aspiration? The purpose of your enterprise, its motivating aspiration.
⢠Where will you play? A playing field where you can achieve that aspiration.
⢠How will you win? The way you will win on the chosen playing field.
⢠What capabilities must be in place? The set and configuration of capabilities required to win in the chosen way.
⢠What management systems are required? The systems and measures that enable the
capabilities and support the choices.
It isnât entirely easy to make your way through the full choice cascade. Doing so isnât a one-way, linear process. There is no checklist, whereby you create and articulate aspirations, then move on to where-to-play and how-to-win choices, then consider capabilities. Rather, strategy is an iterative process in which all of the moving parts influence one another and must be taken into account together.
The essence of great strategy is making choicesâclear, tough choices, like what businesses to be in and which not to be in, where to play in the businesses you choose, how you will win where you play, what capabilities and competencies you will turn into core strengths, and how your internal systems will turn those choices and capabilities into consistently excellent performance in the marketplace. And it all starts with an aspiration to win and a definition of what winning looks like.
CHAPTER SEVEN: Think Through Strategy
âAs you begin articulating your strategic choice cascade, the obvious place to start is at the top. Weâve argued that it is essential to define a winning aspiration up front, and it does make sense to begin thinking about strategy by defining the purpose of your enterprise; without having an initial definition of winning, it is difficult to assess the value of any subsequent choice. You need a winning aspiration against which you can weigh differentchoices. But remember that strategy is an iterative process, and youâll need to return to refine your winning aspiration in the context of the subsequent choices. So, rather than dwell on crafting the perfect definition of winning, sketch a prototype, with the understanding that you will return to it later with the rest of the cascade in mind. Then consider the real work of strategy as beginning with where to play and how to winâthe very heart of strategy. These are the choices that actually define what you will do, and where
you will do it, so as to generate competitive advantage.â (Lafley and Martin, âPlaying to
Winâ, p.159-160)
âUltimately, there are four dimensions you need to think about to choose where to play
and how to win:
⢠The industry. What is the structure of your industry and the attractiveness of its segments?
⢠Customers. What do your channel and end customers value?
⢠Relative position. How does your company fare, and how could it fare, relative to the competition?
⢠Competition. What will your competition do in reaction to your chosen course of action? These four dimensions can be understood through a framework we call the strategy logic
flow, which poses seven questions across the four dimensions.