The Right Way to Share Your Strategy
Source: The Nour Group, Inc. / Sample Strategy Visualization Process

The Right Way to Share Your Strategy

A CEO client of mine asked me to look at his company’s new strategy, and he sent over a 44-page PowerPoint presentation. When I got to slide six, I called him and confessed, “I don’t know what you want them to think, feel, or do differently.”

When it comes to bringing your strategy to life, words alone won’t do it, especially when you use too many words. Employees will not understand where to focus their attention because you have failed to focus their attention.

The image above illustrates a different approach; I call it Strategy Visualization. It’s a single image that captures a process, a strategy, or almost anything else that needs to be clarified, communicated to vastly different audiences, or perhaps in multiple languages.

When we create such an image for clients, there are usually two to three core components; think of these as main idea drivers. Each component has no more than two to three credibility elements; these are believable validations of that idea or particular direction. Every element is represented by a visual image. At the core of this visual, you focus on the “why” (you might call this the WOW). What’s the desired outcome we're after?

Armed with this sort of image, client organizations discover that their strategy goes from convoluted to clear. It’s not just that we made a pretty picture. The very act of reducing your strategy to a single visual image forces you and your team to focus your employees’ attention. It makes you answer the question, “What are we really trying to say here?”

To convey a complex idea to a broad base of stakeholders, make a picture.

Relationships go bad when there are misaligned expectations; visual images work extremely well to help align future expectations. They communicate: here is where we are going and this is what we need you to do to help us get there.

Relationships are built on great conversations. A clear and compelling image spurs productive conversations and the narrative reinforces relationships.

In contrast, imagine 25 employees stumbling out of a strategy session based on a deck jam-packed with 5,000 words. No one knows what to do, when, or with whom. Employees feel uneasy, and possibly even threatened. In some cases, they immediately start competing to protect their jobs and their domains.

Once you have a compelling image, share it widely. One client printed 150 wall-sized posters for offices around the country and even wrapped the image on the outside of delivery trucks. Another client opens every meeting, every leadership call, every all-hands staff meeting with their strategy visual.

In doing so, you are helping employees not just act differently, but also communicate differently. They will be better able to not only discuss your strategy with peers but also to accurately convey your message to partners and clients.

David Nour is the author of ten books including his new book, Co-Create: How Your Business Will Profit from Innovative and Strategic Collaboration (St. Martin's Press, May 9, 2017). He is a popular speaker and a trusted advisor to many leading companies. Here he is working on the Co-Create Canvas with his colleagues Lin and Sarah.

Carolyn Evans

Leader, Influencer, Mentor, Innovator #cevans767 NCPMI President 2025

7y

As my sister once described me to her friend "My sister is not terse". I am now learning to draw big pictures instead.

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Janice Kobelsky, FCPA, FCMA

Leadership development and strategy facilitator; energizing people, possibilities, potential

7y

Love this article, David Nour and the insights you've given us as to why this can be so valuable. Like you said, the visual supports better alignment of expectations and reduces frustration. I've also found it makes the interconnectedness and overall integration of various parts of the organization much clearer. It means giving everyone a greater line of sight in terms of their individual contribution and the value their work brings to each other and to the "whole."

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Greg Basham

Leadership, Executive Coach, Team Facilitator, Strategic Advisory

7y

Engaging members of an organization in envisioning and ideas development sessions with a framework such as David Nour's schematic outlines is highly useful if underpinned with a clear Vision and set of clear and coherent Strategic Priorities from the CEO and the top executive team. This means that the CEO must be the Chief Strategic Officer although it doesn't mean that there's not a key exec and staff group leading these efforts in conjunction with an engaged CEO, executive team and ultimately the board of directors.

Dr. Ralf Mertens

Passionate Senior Quality, Environmental, Health & Safety Manager - Thought Leader - Systemic Business Coach - Freelancer - Interim Management

7y

Thanks for sharing, David. Love it and will use your advice for my HSE strategy! Very cool stuff!

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JOEL ALPERT ⚡️

Don’t you want integrated thinking? ⚡️ Fractional CMO | Strategic Consultant | Marketing Communications Director | SMB | Brand Consultant | Rebranding | Direct Response | Direct Mail | Integrated Marketing Communications

7y

Nice insight into making "strategy" communicate to the people who can leverage most! Haven't done this for a while, but I also know it works, thanks for the reminder to keep it visual....did high-production-value poster that looked like a painting on linen for a major insurance company, it went over big.

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