Strategy is the correct way of interacting with the world for your type. Generator — Wait to Respond, Manifesting Generator — Respond + Inform, Projec...
What is Strategy and Why Do I Need It?
"Strategy" is one of the most overused and least understood words in modern work. It gets slapped on slide decks, quarterly plans, and vague ambitions. Then, when nothing changes, people blame "the strategy" as if it were a magic document that failed to launch.
Strategy is not a document. It is not a goal. It is not a to-do list dressed up in formal language. Strategy is the discipline of making hard choices, and then aligning your actions, time, and resources to honor them.
The Real Definition: Choosing What Not to Do
Michael Porter, who probably thought about strategy more carefully than anyone in the last fifty years, defined it as the deliberate choice to be different. That means being clear about what you are not doing.
Most people and organizations don't fail because they lack a strategy. They fail because they have too many. Every opportunity looks attractive. Every customer request feels urgent. Every new tool seems essential. Without a strategic filter, you end up doing a hundred things adequately instead of three things exceptionally.
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Calculate your chartA simple test: if your "strategy" doesn't make anyone slightly uncomfortable, it isn't a strategy. It's a wish list.
Why You Actually Need It
Without strategy, you get drift. Drift looks like activity. It looks like busy. But it never compounds.
Strategy exists to answer three questions on a recurring basis:
1. Where are we trying to go?
2. Why is that worth going to?
3. What will we say no to in order to get there?
Notice that none of these questions are about tactics. Tactics — the specific actions, campaigns, features, and processes — are downstream. They matter, but they only matter if they serve a clearer answer to the questions above.
Strategy, Goals, and Tactics Are Not the Same
This is where most confusion lives. A goal is a destination. A tactic is a specific move. A strategy is the logic connecting where you are to where you want to be, including the tradeoffs you're willing to make along the way.
"Increase revenue by 20%" is a goal.
"Launch a podcast and run paid ads" is a tactic.
"We win by becoming the obvious choice for overwhelmed founders who want clarity, not more options" is a strategy.
The strategy makes the goal and the tactics coherent. Without it, you can hit your goal and still end up somewhere you didn't intend.
How to Think Strategically Without a Consultant
Strategic thinking is a habit, not a workshop. Three practices build it:
- Schedule a thinking block. One hour, once a week, with no inputs. No email, no meetings, no feeds. Just a question on the page and your honest answer.
- Write your "not-doing" list. Beside every priority, write what you're giving up to pursue it. If you can't name what you're giving up, the priority probably isn't real.
- Test decisions against your strategy. Before saying yes to a project, ask: does this make us better at the thing we said we'd be best at? If not, decline, even if the money is good.
The Shadow Side of Strategy
Strategy without execution is theater. A beautiful framework no one follows is just expensive wallpaper. The opposite trap — endless execution with no strategic direction — is equally common, and harder to spot because it feels productive.
The gift of a real strategy is focus. The shadow is rigidity. A strategy should be revisited every quarter, not every five years and not every Tuesday. Conditions change. Your strategy should adapt, but it should not constantly dissolve.
A Quiet Closing Thought
You don't need a forty-page document. You need a clear point of view about why you exist, who you serve, and what you'll refuse to do. Everything else is detail.


