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Brain Circuits

The Strategy Stack: four steps for robust decision-making 

Published February 25, 2025 in Brain Circuits • 3 min read

Popular strategy frameworks often fall short in today’s uncertain and rapidly changing environment. Use this Q&A checklist to make better-informed strategic choices.

Question: Where do we need to make choices?

Solution: Identify interrelated domains of choice

Strategic decisions require making choices across multiple domains that are self-reinforcing or compatible. Begin by identifying interrelated domains of choice. Here are five key ones:

  • Products: What products should we develop in the future?
  • Geographies: Which regions should we focus on, and how?
  • Service: How should we turn servicing activities into a viable business model?
  • Production: Where and how should we produce our products?
  • People: How should we attract, develop, and retain the required talent?

Question: What can we do?

Solution: Explore options for each domain

Identify potential options within each domain of choice without judging whether one is better than another. Central to option-creation is to separate it from the evaluation stage (see below) – otherwise you risk closing off your search prematurely. With regard to a specific product, you might consider options such as:

  • Exploring the highly differentiated premium end of a specific technology with a limited customer group.
  • Addressing a broader market with less advanced technology.
  • Both of the above.

Question: What do we value?

Solution: Define criteria

Strategic choices seldom involve maximizing a single criterion, such as product quality or profitability. Ask yourself the following questions to identify where value resides:

  • How risky is this new product?
  • Does it fit with our existing range of offerings?
  • Does it support our business unit’s goals?
  • Do we want this? (desirability)
  • Can we do this? (feasibility)

Question: Which option(s) offer most value?

Solution: Make trade-offs

Ultimately, strategic decision-making boils down to trade-offs. What are you willing to let go of that you value because it enables you to get something you value even more? Such decisions are even harder with stakeholders with different preferences. A simple decision matrix can help; particularly for those domains of choice most contested among stakeholders. Here’s how:

  • Lay out options on one axis and criteria on the other.
  • Evaluate the options on every criterion.
  • The matrix reveals the trade-offs among the options, enabling a meaningful debate.

Key learning

The Strategy Stack enables you to conduct holistic analyses of external environments, assess internal strengths and weaknesses, and take a fresh look at target markets, value propositions, organizational arrangements, and partnerships to build competitive advantage.

Authors

Albrecht Enders

Professor of Innovation and Strategy at IMD

Albrecht Enders is Professor of Strategy and Innovation at IMD and co-director of  the Transition of Business Leadership program, and the Complex Problem Solving. His major research, teaching, and consulting interests are in the areas of managing discontinuous change and top-team strategy development processes. Before joining IMD, Professor Enders spent three years as a consultant with The Boston Consulting Group in Cologne where he worked on projects in the areas of financial services, energy, and industrial goods.

Ajay K. Kohli

Regents Professor (Marketing) at the Scheller College of Business, Georgia Institute of Technology

Ajay Kohli is the Gary T. and Elizabeth R. Jones Chair and Regents Professor (Marketing) at the Scheller College of Business, Georgia Institute of Technology. His research focuses on customer-centricity, sales management, B2B marketing, and brand management. Kohli has served as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Marketing, the premier broad-based academic journal in marketing. He is currently Associate Editor of the Journal of Marketing and Area Editor of the International Journal of Research in Marketing.

Andreas König

Professor of Strategic Management, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship at the University of Passau

Andreas König is Professor of Strategic Management, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship at the University of Passau. He is also a Visiting Professor at Free University Amsterdam and a member of the visiting faculties at the Leipzig Graduate School of Management, ESMT Berlin, and the Vienna University of Economics and Business. His research has been published in leading journals, including Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Review, and Academy of Management Journal.

Arnaud Chevallier

Professor of Strategy at IMD

Arnaud Chevallier is Professor of Strategy at IMD, Director of the Global Management Foundations program, and Co-Director of the Complex Problem Solving program. His research, teaching, and consulting on strategic thinking bridges disciplines to provide concrete tools to improve decision making and corporate problem solving. He has written two books: Strategic Thinking in Complex Problem Solving and Solvable: A Simple Solution to Complex Problems, co-authored with Albrecht Enders.

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