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How to master strategy, as simply as I can …

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Understand that strategy is a continuous cycle. You don't have all the information you need, you don't know all the patterns and there are many aspects of life that are uncertain … fortunately not all is. Start with a direction (i.e. a why of purpose, as in "I wish to win this game of chess") but be prepared to adapt as the game unfolds (i.e. the why of movement, as in "should I move this chess piece or that one?").

Your first step on the journey is to understand the cycle of strategy. Lots of people can help you here from John Boyd (OODA loops) to Sun Tzu (art of war).

Step 1 — The cycle

Your next step is to observe the game i.e. to look at the landscape. This is essential for you to be able to learn about the game, to communicate with others and to anticipate change. To observe the landscape you must have a map of its context e.g. in chess it is the chess board and pieces, in warfare it's often a geographical map and troop movement. Any map must have the basic characteristics of :-

  • being visual
  • context specific (i.e. to the game at hand including the pieces involved)
  • position of pieces relative to some anchor (in geographical maps this is the compass, in chess it is the board itself)
  • movement (i.e. how things can change, the constraint of possibilities)

In business, extremely few companies have maps. Most have things they call maps (e.g. stories, business process diagrams, strategy plans) which turn out not to be maps as they lack these basic characteristics. A simple way of mapping a business is to start with user need, understand the value chain and map it over evolution.

Step 2 — Learn Landscape (hint : use a map).

Once you have a map, then you can start to learn the next part of the strategy cycle i.e. climatic patterns. These are things that effect all players and can be considered rules of the game. The more you play, the more rules you'll discover. I've added a basic list, to get you started in business.

Step 3 — Learn Climatic Patterns

Even with a few basic patterns you can apply these to your map to start to learn how things could change. There will be more patterns out there but again, you'll need to keep playing the game to learn them. With a map, you visibly communicate in a common language those things you expect to change. This also enables others to challenge your assumptions, a key part of learning.

Step 4 — Anticipate (by applying climatic patterns)

Now you have an idea of your landscape and how it can change, you'll want to start doing stuff about it. However, there are two classes of choice — universal and context specific. Universal choices are those which are beneficial to all, regardless of the context. To help you on your way I've provided a basic set which we call 'doctrine'. As with patterns, the more you play the game then the more universal forms of doctrine you'll discover.

Step 5 — Learn Doctrine

Of course, knowing about doctrine is not enough — you'll want to apply it. When it comes to applying doctrine then there are three basic cases:-

  • the map solves doctrine for you (e.g. having a common language)
  • you can use many maps to apply doctrine (e.g. use of multiple maps of different lines of business to reduce duplication and bias)
  • you can apply doctrine directly to a map (e.g. cell based structures, cultural forms such as pioneer — settler — town planner)

Step 6 — Apply Doctrine

The other class of choice is context specific. You will learn there exists many approaches that you can deploy in order to influence the map. These approaches depend upon the map and the position of pieces within it i.e. they are not universal and you have to learn when and where to use them. I've provided a basic list. As with climatic patterns and doctrine, then the more you play the game then the more context specific patterns you will discover.

Step 7 — Learn Context Specific Play

With your understanding of the landscape, an ability to anticipate change based upon climatic patterns and a knowledge of context specific play then you can manipulate the map. You use the map to determine where you could attack and then use gameplay (e.g. use an open source approach) to determine why you should attack this or that point over another.

Step 8 — Apply gameplay

You then decide to act. You loop around the cycle and repeat this whole exercise. As you go, you will learn more about the landscape, climatic patterns, doctrine and gameplay becoming better at playing the game.

It's worth remembering that one of your actions maybe to change direction of the company itself, to alter your very purpose. The why of movement (as in why here over there) can alter your why of purpose (as in your direction, your moral imperative, your scope). You might start of as a paper mill but you might become a telecommunications company. Get used to it, there is no "core" to a company beyond short term immediate focus.

Step 9 — Loop (i.e. go back to step 1).

A few things to remember

1. When companies tell you they have maps, they don't except in the rarest of cases. Most companies rely on things which are not maps (e.g. stories, customer journeys, business process diagrams, value stream maps) and hence fail to effectively learn about their landscape. They will often use different forms of diagrams to communicate between groups causing endless miscommunication, alignment and duplication issues. The maps above have been used from nation states to individual systems and everything in between (they are also all creative commons, share alike).

2. The map is constantly changing. These are living documents. With practice it should take a few hours to map a business from scratch and these have to adapt as you discover more. This is relatively simple if they become embedded as a means of communication.

3. Most companies aren't playing chess when it comes to strategy (despite what you read). At best, most are simply meme copying others or running on gut feel and highest paid person's opinion.

4. Maps are a means of learning about the environment and communicating this. It's an iterative process and it will take you years to become good at it. In fact, I've been using these maps for over a decade and I'm still learning.

5. All models are wrong, some are merely useful. Someone will produce a more useful method of mapping.

6. Without a means of mapping the landscape (i.e. the terrain) then you can never effectively learn the terrain. Do note, when someone says the map is not the terrain, that's all well and dandy except that most companies do not have any form of map and are often reduced to telling stories (a bit like how Viking's navigated). As tempting as it is to believe that you can just "know" the environment, it's worth considering why maps have been used throughout modern history for military campaigns rather than relying on people to just "know".

7. All maps are imperfect. For example, to create a perfect map of France then you would need 1:1 scale at which point the map (being the size of France) is practically useless and you'll have spent so long creating the map that it'll be hopelessly out of date. You'll just have to get used to imperfection, uncertainty (the uncharted space) and a fair dollop of assumption. Maps are not the "truth" but a guide which an entire army can collaborate and communicate around.

8. The components in the map represents points of capital and the lines between them represent flows of capital. In the ones I've shown above, I've mapped activities however you can map activities, practices, data, knowledge and other forms of capital.

9. "How to master strategy" … well, I'm still learning. For now, all I can say is that strategy seems to be a journey of constant learning and the more I learn, the more I realise how little I know. If anyone does actually become a master then I'd be pleased to read about how they did it. There maybe a faster way to master strategy than a seemingly endless journey of learning or a 2x2 that'll explain everything but so far, I haven't found it.

If you want to learn more on this, I'm writing a book on this approach (creative commons, share alike).

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This post is provided as Creative commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International by the original author, Simon Wardley, a researcher for the Leading Edge Forum .

Catch me on twitter as @swardley

Originally published at blog.gardeviance.org .

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