Ensuring your strategy is compelling
Strategy Execution by Design Series
Lever 2: Strategic Clarity & Alignment
Element 4: Ensuring your strategy is compelling
When was the last time you heard someone outside the executive team talk about the strategy, unprompted, and with clarity and belief?
A strategy can be clear on paper, but what makes it truly compelling is how it’s shared and reinforced so people understamd it, believe it and act on it. Many organisations nail the design but neglect the delivery, forgetting that connection is what turns strategy into execution.
I’ve seen too many organisations stop at a single announcement: a launch event, a glossy one-pager, a town hall, assuming the message has landed. But without continual reinforcement, it fades. People quickly slip back to old routines, unsure how the strategy connects to their work. As one executive told me in my research: “We had a strategy, but no one explained it clearly or often enough for people to live it.”
Strategy becomes compelling when it’s communicated consistently and in ways that resonate. The real test: do people hear it, understand it, remember it, and repeat it? and do they see what this means for them?
Neurocognitive research shows someone needs to hear a new message at least three to seven times before it truly registers. What drives retention is repeated exposure in varied contexts, hearing the same idea through stories, visuals, and examples, and spacing those messages over time to strengthen recall.
McKinsey notes that the best organisations cut through noise with simple, repeated narratives that leaders embody every day. Many executives treat strategy communication as an afterthought, which is why even senior managers struggle to recall their priorities.
What I’ve seen work is when organisations use multiple mechanisms to reinforce: leaders tell the story often and consistently; visuals and roadmaps to make connections tangible; workshops to explore “what does this mean for us?”; and check-ins where progress is tracked and understood across the business. The roadmap from translation (Post 3 in this lever) becomes the anchor, but the real magic lies in how it’s communicated.
So, what makes a strategy compelling?
• People understand it and leaders have the skills to share it: plain, human language, not corporate code.
• They see why choices were made: the logic, trade-offs, and purpose behind them.
• They can connect it to their work: through conversations that make it real.
• They hear it often: through leaders who repeat and live the message until it sticks.
• And the organisation reinforces it: embedding strategy in planning, recognition, and routines so it endures.
That’s why Strategic Clarity & Alignment is Lever 2 in my Execution by Design model. A strategy that is compelling isn’t just clear, it inspires belief, alignment, and momentum.

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