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The traditional division between C-suite strategists and employee executors is obsolete. With rapidly shortening business cycles, strategy must be treated as a dynamic, iterative process developed collaboratively with the people on the ground executing it.

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The era of stable, long-term planning is over. In a volatile environment, plans become obsolete quickly. The new leadership model is to ensure everyone deeply understands the company's direction and vision, empowering them to constantly adapt their tactics to reach the goal, rather than rigidly follow an outdated plan.

Addressing the human side of strategy is not just about culture. It requires focusing on the 'inside out' perspective by explicitly designing the company's operating model—its core tasks, processes, and collaboration methods—to support and execute strategic choices effectively and consistently.

The best strategists are not those who create the most complex plans, but those who are the best "executionalists." Their primary skill is distilling a complex strategy down to its simple, actionable essence, enabling cross-functional teams to execute without confusion.

Traditional, multi-week strategic planning often loses momentum and only includes top leaders. Compressing this into a single, focused day with the entire team creates a powerful shared experience. This intensive approach fosters better alignment, develops a common language, and avoids the delays and silos common in staggered meetings.

Combining strategy, M&A, and integration under a single leader provides a full lifecycle, enterprise-wide view. This structure breaks down silos and creates a "closed-loop system" where post-deal integration performance and lessons learned directly feed back into future strategy and deal theses, refining success metrics beyond financials.

True business agility requires constantly syncing nested plans—tactical, operational, and strategic. It also involves managing efforts across three time horizons: the 'now, next, and beyond.' This military-inspired framework ensures immediate actions align with long-term vision amidst constant change.

The most effective strategist is not the one who creates the most comprehensive plan, but the one who can distill that complexity into a simple, executable essence. A 200-page strategy is worthless if the cross-functional team cannot easily understand and act on it. True strategic work is in simplification.

As companies grow from 30 to 200 people, they naturally become slower. A CEO's critical role is to rebuild the company's operating model, deliberately balancing bottom-up culture with top-down strategic planning to regain speed and ensure everyone is aligned.

The rapid pace of change in AI renders long-term strategic planning ineffective. With foundational technology shifts occurring quarterly, companies must adopt a fluid approach. Strategy should focus on core principles and institutional memory, while remaining flexible enough to integrate new tech and iterate on tactics constantly.

The traditional agile practitioner role is disappearing. Professionals are on two distinct paths: ascending to a strategic level by tying delivery to business outcomes, or seeing their roles diminished, absorbed, or eliminated. The middle ground has vanished, forcing a choice between strategy and obsolescence.