3:22 of reading - Learn how to avoid fake niceness at work recognize "strategic flaccidity" and stop cooperating, start cooperating for truly shared goals.
CONDIVIDI
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Antonio Civita
“Clear is kind. Unclear is unkind. Being clear about expectations requires real courage.” – Brené Brown
—
There is a linear relationship between clarity of strategy and quality of execution. When you say “let’s increase sales” without specifying by how much, of what product, from what channel, with what budget, and at the expense of what other priority, you are shifting the burden of your own strategic flaccidity onto employees.
It takes a great deal of courage to say no publicly. No to interesting but misaligned projects. No to opportunities that would distract from the focus. No to important customer requests that would undermine strategy. Every “yes” we say brings with it many “no’s,” but few make these trade-offs explicit and shared.
An organization’s success is hindered not by a lack of resources, but by a constant refusal to engage in uncomfortable conversations.
The “polite and courteous” corporate culture often becomes a mask for management incompetence.
When you ask for an update and receive only answers such as “we are doing well” instead of a detailed “we have achieved 73 percent of our goal with three weeks to go before the deadline,” you prefer the comfort of ambiguity over accountability for strategic accuracy.
Meetings become theaters of mindless optimism, feedback turns into generic compliments, and performance reviews measure anything but one’s contribution to business results. What are the consequences? Passive-aggressive behavior, parallel meetings, and unclear directions that threaten to sabotage corporate culture.
Leadership is not a matter of position on the organizational chart. All companies, whether they want to or not, are becoming asynchronous, with geographically distributed teams and projects requiring different skills, and every person who makes decisions that influence others is doing leadership.
The senior programmer influencing the architecture of a system, the project manager influencing priorities, the designer influencing the user experience. Everyone is leading their team. But where exactly?
There is a proliferation of managers in the company, of people with opinions whose only output is a conference call with an AI-generated summary with next steps. But all these managers, what strategy do they manage?
One must acquire the ability to be clear in one’s decisions and to communicate the “why” behind each choice, even better if supported by hard data.
A good leader must acquire the ability to stay within the complexity of problems without seeking emotional shortcuts. When a goal is delayed, it does not look for culprits but analyzes systematic roadblocks. It doesn’t protect the team’s ego, but helps everyone grow.
It takes the courage to be kind through clarity to evolve from simple collaboration to cooperation.
Collaboration means working together while protecting one’s goals and aiming to emerge as individuals.
Instead, cooperating involves sharing work, goal and merit.
A goal is courageous not because it has big numbers but because it speaks clearly. It highlights what needs to be done, and what needs to be given up. It asks for contributions to precise, measurable results. In this way, teams naturally stop defending their silos and start asking, “How can I do my part even better?”
Being clear requires a good deal of vulnerability: admitting when targets were too conservative, recognizing when a strategy is not working, having the courage to stop initiatives that do not produce measurable progress.
Teams do not lack motivation, they lack clarity. No award trips, yoga retreats, cooking classes, or tug-of-war replaces the cruelty of working with an ambiguous strategy where any project can be justified as strategic, any victory by the boss, and any defeat by the team.People always want to give their best, and strategic clarity is the first building block to build that famous psychological security that allows this to happen.
ALWAYS MAKE PROGRESS ⤴ Antonio –
PS: Those who use MAKE PROGRESS® to drive business growth gain unprecedented strategic clarity, reduce urgencies and focus on a few high-impact strategic activities. Get an implementation roadmap that fits your situation.
Don't miss the next Notes. Every Monday at 7:00 a.m. Free.
Tools and frameworks to unlock innovation in your company and apply Design Thinking, Blue Ocean Strategy, JTBD and OKRs in practice.
Those who grow do three things differently: they separate current management from strategic exploration, they establish a weekly learning cycle that transforms evidence into action, and they reduce the complexity of metrics to three interconnected levels that describe product, impact, and profit.
5:48 reading time — Discover why efficiency can become the greatest strategic threat. Learn to distinguish true focus from simple organizational shortsightedness. Learn how to redesign incentives and language to create adaptability.
5:27 read — Are company numbers a weapon or an opportunity? Prevent your OKRs from turning into micromanagement. Use check-ins to work less, eliminating unnecessary work.
11:40 reading time - Corporate boredom is hemorrhaging talent and the future. Ignoring innovation becomes your next big problem. Turn strategy into a game everyone wants to win.
3:15 reading time - The map and territory in Strategy Refresh. 3 questions to pack. How to write Purpose, Vision and Mission by letting AI interview you.
4:18 reading time - Your real strategy is not in your calendar. Do you feel the engine revving? Maybe it's strategic dissonance. Let's create time together for strategic work.
3:50 reading time - Forget strategy, at least for one today. Use the "80% ready" technique. The signal you are waiting for is precisely your procrastination.
3:22 of reading - Learn how to avoid fake niceness at work recognize "strategic flaccidity" and stop cooperating, start cooperating for truly shared goals.
12:00 reading time - Discover the question that reveals whether you are managing a to-do list. Discover why the best business goals are designed to break things down. Assign the two leadership roles needed for flawless strategic execution.
Weeks 1-9: Finally the strategy stops being that presentation that no one opens anymore and becomes real. Weeks 10-12: teams discover where the company is going and start rowing in the same direction. Weeks 13-16: the organization finds its natural rhythm and systematically removes any obstacles to progress.
9:53 reading time - The brain is a sadist: the more you struggle, the more it likes it. The problem is not the challenge. It's what you think it says about you. Watching an expert at work is like getting a self-esteem boost.