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EXECUTION.ZIP: Decompressing The Organizational Path From Strategy To Outcomes

EXECUTION.ZIP: Decompressing The Organizational Path From Strategy To Outcomes in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $15.99
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EXECUTION.ZIP: Decompressing The Organizational Path From Strategy To Outcomes

Coles

EXECUTION.ZIP: Decompressing The Organizational Path From Strategy To Outcomes in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $15.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

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*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
It is a familiar, almost sacred corporate ritual: the executive offsite. For three days, the leadership team isolates themselves in a glass-walled boardroom, far removed from the daily noise of the business. They bring in external facilitators, analyze macroeconomic headwinds, debate market adjacencies, and map out competitive disruptions. They fill whiteboards with complex matrices and cover the walls in color-coded sticky notes. Late into the evening, fueled by catered coffee and a shared sense of urgency, they ultimately align on a bold, transformative new strategic vision. By Friday afternoon, they emerge victorious. The strategy is brilliant. The financial modeling is rigorous. The 80-page slide deck is flawless. Handshakes are exchanged, and a palpable sense of relief and optimism fills the room. The value proposition is undeniable. The executive team believes the hardest part of their job is done. Then comes Monday morning. The strategy is announced at a mandatory, company-wide town hall. The CEO delivers a passionate, polished keynote. The core pillars of the new vision are distributed via mass email. And then... nothing happens. For the first few weeks, there is a flurry of superficial activity. Email signatures are updated, town hall recordings are archived, and middle managers schedule "alignment check-ins." But beneath the surface, the operational reality of the business remains completely unchanged. Six months later, the board demands a progress report, only to find that the strategic vision is still trapped inside that 80-page slide deck. The organization, meanwhile, is still running on its legacy behaviors, missing targets, and burning out its best people. This is the strategy-to-execution gap. It is the silent killer of enterprise value. As a consultant advising cross-border enterprises in Europe, Americas, Asia and Africa, and directing research at a London business think tank, I have witnessed this exact scenario play out across dozens of industries. The failure to execute is rarely a failure of intelligence. It is not a lack of ambition, nor is it a sign of a lazy workforce. Instead, it is a fundamental, systemic breakdown in organizational translation and design.
It is a familiar, almost sacred corporate ritual: the executive offsite. For three days, the leadership team isolates themselves in a glass-walled boardroom, far removed from the daily noise of the business. They bring in external facilitators, analyze macroeconomic headwinds, debate market adjacencies, and map out competitive disruptions. They fill whiteboards with complex matrices and cover the walls in color-coded sticky notes. Late into the evening, fueled by catered coffee and a shared sense of urgency, they ultimately align on a bold, transformative new strategic vision. By Friday afternoon, they emerge victorious. The strategy is brilliant. The financial modeling is rigorous. The 80-page slide deck is flawless. Handshakes are exchanged, and a palpable sense of relief and optimism fills the room. The value proposition is undeniable. The executive team believes the hardest part of their job is done. Then comes Monday morning. The strategy is announced at a mandatory, company-wide town hall. The CEO delivers a passionate, polished keynote. The core pillars of the new vision are distributed via mass email. And then... nothing happens. For the first few weeks, there is a flurry of superficial activity. Email signatures are updated, town hall recordings are archived, and middle managers schedule "alignment check-ins." But beneath the surface, the operational reality of the business remains completely unchanged. Six months later, the board demands a progress report, only to find that the strategic vision is still trapped inside that 80-page slide deck. The organization, meanwhile, is still running on its legacy behaviors, missing targets, and burning out its best people. This is the strategy-to-execution gap. It is the silent killer of enterprise value. As a consultant advising cross-border enterprises in Europe, Americas, Asia and Africa, and directing research at a London business think tank, I have witnessed this exact scenario play out across dozens of industries. The failure to execute is rarely a failure of intelligence. It is not a lack of ambition, nor is it a sign of a lazy workforce. Instead, it is a fundamental, systemic breakdown in organizational translation and design.

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