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Fabien Ninoles's avatar

It's a bit present in all your points, but strategy is one aspect why I often prefer to compare a company to a caravan rather than a boat. A caravan can split, goes in different directions, disassemble and reassemble later, etc. It could be to scout a new path or to make a detour to get some water for the rest of the group. Some can homestead at some points, to exploit a small lot, while others continue. Seeing a company as a boat going in one direction indicated by one captain feels a lot like a surreal utopia in this sense.

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Dave Reed's avatar

+1 for the preeminence of intuitive strategic thinking. It’s often maligned because an intuitive early in their career must make bad decisions to learn how to make good ones. (I know I did!) Gladwell’s “Blink” is one that resonated deeply in my neurodivergent brain.

Nit: I don’t often see “negotiated” so much as “competed” or “fought” or “defended” or “imposed” in the places I’ve been. I see strategies like frames of reference (as described by Klaff in “Pitch Anything”) with the strongest frame/strategy winning. By winning, I mean in the sense that the market is never wrong. Strategy can’t be separated from its conscious and unconscious components any more than it can from its intended and unintended components (money/time invested versus luck/timing). The “best” strategy always wins. But beware the fool who tries to copy someone else’s “best practices” without copying the exact circumstances in which they were best. 😏 Better to look for principles upon which to make intentional trade offs.

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