8 Tough Questions to Ask About Your Company’s Strategy

Here is an excerpt from an article written by Paul Leinwand and Matthias Bäumlerfor Harvard Business Review and the HBR Blog Network. To read the complete article, check out the wealth of free resources, obtain subscription information, and receive HBR email alerts, please click here.

Illustration Credit: Gjon Mili/Getty Images

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Companies often fail to address the tough questions about strategy and execution: Are we really clear, as a leadership team, about how we choose to create value in the marketplace? Can we articulate the few things the organization needs to do better than anyone else in order to deliver on that value proposition? Are we investing in those areas, and do they fit with most of the products and services we sell?

If your answer is yes to these and the other tough questions in the exhibit below, you’re among the select few. In our experience, one of the biggest challenges in business today is that way too few companies are asking or answering these fundamental questions.

Why is that? Why is it so difficult for leaders to talk about these topics?

Often, executives avoid questions they are not sure how to answer. Or leaders and employees may feel that it’s just not the right time to be asking them, perhaps rationalizing that the CEO has been at the helm of the company for a year or more and a strategy is already in place. They might feel that the time for asking these questions has already passed, and they don’t want to come across as launching criticism. Some executives may in fact value the lack of strategic clarity because it allows them to pursue their own priorities. As for CEOs themselves, they often do ask these questions when they start in their roles, but they often feel constrained by the boundaries handed to them — either an incoherent portfolio, or strong short-term pressure to meet targets that diverts their attention.

If the executive team doesn’t consistently address these questions, boards — who in many ways own the long-term strategic direction of the company — should at least ask management to provide answers, if not directly participate in finding those answers. However, most directors feel they are brought in way too late in the strategy process to have meaningful engagement.

The result is that tough questions about the linkage between strategy and execution often go unaddressed.

So what can companies do to build a culture of accountability around the most important strategic questions? Leaders should consider three tactics: One is to build in a process for the executive team to discuss these fundamental questions. Unfortunately, the traditional approach to strategic planning often doesn’t provide room for these discussions, because it tends to be very bottom-up, financial, and often incremental in nature. Instead, what is needed is a time and place for executives to step away from the day-to-day urgencies and discuss and debate these questions openly.

A second tactic is to involve a larger part of the organization in a discussion on how the company is doing on strategy and execution. Like the annual employee survey, organizations should take the pulse around the most important strategic topics. Such a survey provides powerful insights about how well your employees — the people who know the company best — think it is positioned for success, how well they feel they are delivering on the value proposition, and how effectively they are able to connect their individual work to the strategy of the organization. Besides telling you what people think the company’s main challenges are, it also helps create a climate where such questions can be raised… and are raised. Many organizations have used our strategy profiler that takes just a few minutes to complete, and yields very helpful insights.

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Here is a direct link to the complete article.

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