Strategy Arcade

Why Most Strategies Fail Before They Even Launch

Most strategies do not fail because the thinking is wrong. They fail because the thinking has never been tested.

I have watched hundreds of strategies get presented in boardrooms over the past 30 years. The ones that work are not the ones with the cleanest slides. They are the ones whose underlying logic has been deliberately stress-tested before anyone committed capital or talent to them.

This is what the Strategy Arcade is for. It is the part of a BUILD engagement where we stop projecting and start probing. We put your strategy in a structured sandbox and try to break it before the market does.

What we are actually doing

Most companies between $5M and $100M do not fail because they lack a plan. They fail because of strategy debt. That is the accumulated weight of unvalidated assumptions that have been sitting around long enough to feel like truth. Founder intuition. Last year's playbook. "The way we have always done it." None of those have been tested against the world that exists right now.

In the Strategy Arcade, we red-team the strategy against the disruptions most likely to actually arrive. Three categories show up nearly every time.

Policy and regulatory volatility. What happens to your margins if a regulatory change hits in 48 hours? Most teams have never done that math.

Technological disruption. What if a competitor automates your primary value? AI is the obvious flavor right now, but the question is older than ChatGPT.

Economic thrashing. What if resource velocity drops 20% overnight, or capital costs spike, or a key supplier doubles its price?

These are not academic exercises. We use real numbers from the business and real moves a competitor could plausibly make. Then we watch what holds and what cracks.

The Pre-Mortem

The other half of the Strategy Arcade is the Pre-Mortem. We assume something specific. Imagine it is two years from today, and your strategy has not worked. Not generically. Specifically. Then we work backward to identify the logic leaks that led to the failure.

This is not pessimism. It is the opposite. By naming the failure modes early, we build signposts into the operating plan. Early-warning systems. Triggers that tell the leadership team: "The assumption we made about X is breaking down, time to reassess." Most strategies have no such system. They run until the market makes the failure unmissable, by which point the response window has closed.

The discipline of finding the breaking point in a sandbox before finding it in the field is older than business strategy. Engineers do it with bridges. Pilots do it in simulators. We are simply applying the same logic to corporate strategy, where the cost of a quiet failure is just as high.

What you walk away with

When the Strategy Arcade is finished, you do not have a static 50-page document. You have a tested logic of choice. You know which assumptions held up under pressure, which ones cracked, and what to watch for going forward. You have moved from hopeful forecasting to clinical readiness, which is the only sustainable advantage in volatile conditions.

Why does this matter more in 2026 than in 2019

Three forces have made strategy more fragile and faster than at any point in my career.

The first is AI. Not because every business will be replaced by it, but because the rate at which competitive moats can erode has compressed. A 5-year strategy assumes a stable competitive landscape over the same period. That assumption is no longer free.

The second is regulatory volatility. Industries that used to face one major rule change a decade ago now face several a year. Healthcare, finance, energy, and education are all running at higher policy beta than they used to.

The third is supply chain and capital cost variability. The 20-year era of stable, cheap inputs is over. Plans built on its assumptions are inheriting a risk they did not price.

Each of these is a reason to test logic before you commit capital and talent to it. Not testing is no longer conservative. It is the riskier path.

If your current strategy has not gone through a Strategy Arcade, I would not be confident in it. Not because the thinking is wrong. The thinking is probably fine. But fine thinking that has never met resistance is an opinion backed by confidence. Markets do not respect confidence. They respect logic that has been tested.

If you want to talk about whether your strategy is ready for a Strategy Arcade, schedule a fit call.

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