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There are four important pieces to the definition of business strategy. First is choices. Strategy specifies the choice to do some things and not others. And that choice obeys the rule that if the opposite is stupid on its face, it doesn’t count as a strategy choice. Second is integrated set. The choices must fit together and reinforce one another; they aren’t just a list. Third is positions. The choices explicitly specify a territory in which the organization will play — and will not. Fourth is to win. Strategy specifies a compelling theory for how the organization will be better than its competitors in the chosen territory.

Passages Saved From iOS

Roger Martin

Outcome-driven leaders define success based on outcomes, but they don’t stop there. They also treat organizations like products—something they can design, test, and improve. Steve Jobs was the ultimate example of a leader who managed the company as a product. When asked about which product he was most proud of, he replied: > You know, making a product is hard, but making a team that can continually make products is even harder. The product I’m most proud of is Apple and the team I built at Apple. Outcome-driven leaders treat each element of the organization as a “product feature” that exists to help the organization succeed. These “organizational features” include things like processes, metrics, rituals, reports, structure, data, tools, skills, and behaviors.

Treat Your Company as a Product

Felipe Castro

Strategies focus resources, energy, and attention on some objectives rather than others. Unless collective ruin is imminent, a change in strategy will make some people worse off. Hence, there will be powerful forces opposed to almost any change in strategy.

Good Strategy/Bad Strategy

Richard Rumelt

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