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The Difference Between a Plan and a Prayer
Most "strategies" are actually just expensive wish lists. They are filled with "fluff" words like visionary, world-class, and synergy, but they have no substance. If your strategy is simply a goal to "increase revenue by 20%," you don't have a strategy—you have a target. And as Rumelt points out, a target without a path to get there is just a prayer.
In Good Strategy Bad Strategy, Richard Rumelt—widely considered the "strategy's strategist"—strips away the buzzwords to reveal the brutal, honest truth: Strategy is about power. Specifically, it is the application of strength against a specific weakness.
This book is a masterclass in clear thinking. It teaches you how to identify the "Bad Strategy" that is likely draining your company's resources right now and how to build a "Good Strategy" that actually solves a problem. If you want to stop guessingg and start winning, you need to learn how to find your leverage.
Key Concepts: The Kernel of Success1. The "Kernel" of Good Strategy
Rumelt argues that every good strategy has a simple, logical structure he calls the "Kernel." It consists of three parts:
2. Identifying "Bad Strategy"
Bad strategy is surprisingly easy to spot once you know what to look for. Its hallmarks include:
3. Strategy as Leverage
A good strategy provides leverage by focusing mind, energy, and resources on a pivotal objective. Just as a physical lever multiplies force, a strategic lever multiplies the impact of your efforts by finding the "weak spot" in a competitor or a market gap that others have missed.
4. The Power of Choice (Focus)
Strategy is as much about what you don't do as what you do. Rumelt emphasizes that many leaders fail at strategy because they are afraid to make choices. They try to please everyone or pursue ten goals at once, resulting in a "diluted" effort that achieves nothing. Good strategy requires the courage to say "no" to good ideas to say "yes" to the great ones.
5. Proximate Objectives
One of the most practical tools in the book is the "Proximate Objective." This is a goal that is close enough at hand to be feasible. A leader should set an objective that the organization can actually grasp and solve, rather than a "moonshot" that is so far away it becomes demotivating.
Would you like me to analyze a real-world example from the book (like the re-birth of Apple under Steve Jobs) or should we move on to another title?
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