Part 3: A Great Strategy

This is the last part of a 3 part series around signs of a high performing team. I talked in the first two parts about how meetings can go. First how one meeting has seamless transitions and the second about sequential conversations across meetings. Part 3 was born when I realized I wanted to provide a reason for why teams might be in a funk of unproductive conversations. 

If these things aren’t happening, there might be a strategy problem. Richard Rumelt’s book, The Crux: How Leaders Become Strategists is a great resource on strategy. I love the opening paragraph (it is really all you need to know!): 

A strategy is a mixture of policy and action designed to surmount a high-stakes challenge. It is not a goal or a wished-for end state. It is a form of problem solving, and you cannot solve a problem you do not understand or comprehend. Thus, challenge-based strategy begins with a broad description of the challenge – the problems and opportunities – facing the organization. They may be competitive, legal, due to changing social norms, or issues with the organization itself. 

As understanding deepens, the strategist seeks the crux – the one challenge that both is critical and appears to be solvable. This narrowing down is the source of much of the strategist’s power, as focus remains the cornerstone of strategy. 

One of the key parts to a great strategy that I want to highlight is narrowing down and focusing. To do this, it is not just saying what you will do but being really clear what you are not doing and why because there is a high chance someone in your company wants to do that other thing for certain reasons. 

If there is no focus and you’re doing too many things, it is going to be hard for teams to have productive and sequential conversations amongst each other. 

To be a good strategist, be very explicit about what you aren’t doing and why.