Strategy Execution by Design Series: Cultural Alignment

Jun 05, 2026

Strategy Execution by Design Series

Lever 7: Execution Feasibility
Element 1.1: Cultural Alignment

The strategy was clear: work across functions, break down silos, and deliver outcomes that no single team could achieve alone.

But the culture had other ideas.

I was part of a leadership team that had just launched a new strategy in a deeply siloed organisation. We knew the way of working needed to change. So we went straight to the systems and processes we thought would drive it.
Performance measures, team structures, and decision rights.

It took years. And some of it worked.

But we missed something.

We never intentionally discussed or designed the culture that would enable our strategy. Rather, we focused on the mechanics and assumed the culture would follow.

It didn't.

What I have learned since, through years of working in this space and through my own research, is that even when organisations do design their culture, most focus on the cognitive side: values, behaviours, and systems. 

What rarely gets addressed is the emotional culture: what you want people to feel and not feel for the strategy to land.

Get the emotional culture right, and it drives the behaviours, the systems, and the ways of working that follow.

In our case, we never asked that question. People were carrying the fear of losing relevance and the anxiety of being measured differently. What we never harnessed was the excitement of being part of something bigger. The pride in building something new. The energy that comes from working in ways that actually matter.

It is not just my experience. 64% of the leaders in my research rated culture alignment as a top priority for execution, yet most had never assessed whether their emotional culture matched the strategy they were trying to deliver.

Emotions drive behaviours. Behaviours drive culture. Culture drives performance.

A team that feels trust collaborates. A team that feels fear protects. You do not need to mandate the behaviour if you design the emotional conditions that produce it.

The one-pager below maps six common culture types, the emotions that drive them: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/rebecca-reti-4582433b_strategyexecution-executionbydesign-cultureforexecution-activity-7467319128962408448-AyH2?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAhmYsQBKppHDyfPTxqHXXgP5MmXRjB7WJs

Written by Rebecca Reti, Strategy & Execution Consultant at Rebecca Reti Consulting.

Multiple consultants collaborating with client team across modern high-rise office during strategic implementation workshop