Services / Practice 01 / Six · The thinking layer

Strategy.

Corporate, growth, and business-unit strategy. The thinking everything else flows from.

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Strategy vs. planning

Most companies don't have a strategy problem. They have a planning problem.

A strategy is a set of choices about what to do AND what not to do. A plan is the sequence of activities that follows from the choices. The difference is the no.

You can tell which one you have by looking at the document. If it lists everything the company should do — every market to enter, every product to launch, every customer to win — it's a plan. If it lists what the company is going to stop doing, the markets it's going to leave, the customers it's going to ignore, the products it's going to kill, the bets it's not going to make — that's a strategy.

A strategy without a no is a marketing brochure.

What strategy actually is

Strategy is the five or six choices that determine the next 18 months.

Where to grow. Where to defend. What to enter. What to exit. What to over-invest in. What to under-invest in. How to sequence.

Five or six. Not fifty. The discipline is choosing.

What happens without it

Most growth-mode businesses don't fail because of bad execution. They fail because they tried to execute too many things at once, none of them fully. The team is busy. The budget is spent. The strategic position at the end of the quarter looks identical to the start.

Activity without choice is decay disguised as motion.

Strategy is the discipline of choosing — and the courage to drop what didn't make the list.

Three differences

From the version of strategy work most companies have experienced.

01

Co-authored, not delivered.

A strategy "delivered" by a consultancy is a document the executive team didn't write. They will not defend it under pressure. They will not ship it under deadline. We hold the pen alongside you, in the room, until the choices are yours.

02

Argued, not surfaced.

Strategy work is not a creative exercise. It is a structured argument. We surface every choice, frame the tradeoff, and force the decision. Including the choices the team doesn't want to make. Including the ones that have political cost.

03

Lived in the calendar.

A strategy that survives the offsite and dies in the operating cadence is not a strategy. We design the strategy into the weekly stand-ups, the monthly checkpoints, and the quarterly resets. It lives where the team lives.

A framework you can take with you

The choices that matter most over 18 months always fall into the same six categories. But the choices alone are not the strategy.

A strategy that says where and when, but not how, is just as useless. It leaves the executive team walking out of the room with five different versions of the plan in their heads. The strategy must be the unambiguous reference — every choice paired with the operating path that makes execution clear.

So the framework is two layers: the choices, then the path.

The choices · what / where / when

Not every engagement surfaces all six. Most surface four to six.

1

Where to grow

Geography, segment, or category. The bet that will compound if it lands.

2

Where to defend

The margin business that funds the growth. Underestimating it is a slow-motion failure.

3

What to exit

The loss-making distractions that consume attention without producing returns.

4

What to over-invest in

The bet that compounds. Deserves more capital than the spreadsheet says.

5

What to under-invest in

The false priority dressed as urgency. Always present. Always tempting.

6

How to sequence

Resources are finite. Order is most of the answer.

The path · how

Each choice is paired with three operating answers that close the door on interpretation.

The owner

The single person accountable. Not a committee. Not a workstream. A name.

The motion

What actually has to happen — the channels, the partners, the steps in order.

The trigger

The signal that says continue, escalate, or recalibrate. Pre-agreed, before the work starts.

If the strategy document you have today doesn't take a clear position on at least four of the six choices — and pair each of them with an owner, a motion, and a trigger — it isn't a strategy yet. It is a plan with strategic language painted over it.

The test isn't ambition. The test is whether two senior leaders, reading the strategy in different rooms, would describe what's about to happen the same way.

What we won't do

Four lines we hold.

  • We won't deliver strategy you didn't co-author. (You won't defend it.)

  • We won't run multi-quarter discovery while your business waits. Strategy work runs 8–16 weeks; longer is hiding from the choices.

  • We won't deliver a deck without a recommendation. The deck is for record. The recommendation is what we owe you.

  • We won't bring junior consultants. The senior partner who scopes the work delivers it.

Different in every sector

The practice is the same. The application is not.

Strategy looks different in retail than in gaming, in fintech than in healthcare. Each sector has its own regulators, capital structures, and buyer logics.

Strategy that ships

A senior partner. A scoped engagement. An outcome we are accountable for.

Discuss strategy

FAQ

Strategy questions.

What is the difference between strategy and planning?
A strategy is a set of choices about what to do AND what not to do. A plan is the sequence of activities that follows from the choices. Most documents called "strategy" are plans with strategic-sounding language wrapped around them. They list everything the company should do; they lack the no. A strategy without a no is a marketing brochure.
How do I know if my company actually has a strategy?
Look at your strategy document and answer this: in a sentence, what is the company NOT going to do over the next 18 months? If you can name three things — three markets you're leaving, three products you're killing, three bets you're not making — you probably have a strategy. The presence of a clear "no" across at least four of the six categories — where to grow, where to defend, what to exit, what to over-invest in, what to under-invest in, how to sequence — is the test.
How long does a Dilogic strategy engagement take?
The strategy work itself usually takes 8 to 16 weeks. Anything longer is hiding from the choices. After the strategy is set, we typically continue into directed execution for another 3 to 9 months — until the choices are visible in the operating cadence and the numbers.
Who at Dilogic runs strategy engagements?
A senior partner with 15+ years of corporate or growth strategy experience leads every engagement. There is no analyst pyramid and no junior consultants writing the slides. The partner who scopes the work is the partner who delivers it.