Misunderstood Corporate Strategies Undermine Success
A corporate strategy is only valuable when people understand and commit to it.
Organizations invest significant time and resources in strategic retreat planning facilitation. Executive teams gather at strategy retreats, analyze market opportunities, define priorities, and develop ambitious plans for growth. Yet many strategies fail to deliver results for a surprisingly simple reason: employees do not understand them.
When people cannot clearly articulate strategic priorities, they struggle to:
Even the most sophisticated strategy becomes ineffective when it is misunderstood.
Why Strategic Clarity Matters
Strategic clarity is not a “nice to have.” It is a measurable driver of business performance.
Our organizational alignment research found that strategic clarity accounts for 31% of the difference between high- and low-performing organizations across key business outcomes, including:
Organizations perform better when employees understand where the business is headed, why it matters, and how their work contributes to success.
Despite its importance, strategic clarity remains elusive. After more than three decades of helping organizations improve performance, we continue to be surprised by how many companies have strategies that are either poorly communicated or poorly understood.
How Clear Is Your Strategy?
The gap between leaders’ perceptions and employees’ understanding is often significant.
Our research found that employees rate their organization’s strategic clarity at roughly half the level reported by their managers. This creates what we call the strategic alignment illusion — a leadership blind spot where confidence in strategic communication far exceeds actual employee understanding. When leaders mistake communication for comprehension:
The problem extends beyond perception. Research by Timothy Devinney and colleagues at the University of Technology Sydney asked employees from 20 major corporations to identify their company’s strategy from six possible choices. Even though each organization’s strategy had been publicly communicated, fewer than one-third of employees selected the correct answer.
If employees cannot identify the strategy, they cannot be expected to execute it consistently.
When strategy is unclear, organizations pay a steep price.
Instead of moving toward a shared destination, teams pursue competing priorities, duplicate effort, and become distracted by activities that create little strategic value. The result is organizational churn rather than meaningful progress.
People need to understand their goals and accountabilities, roles and responsibilities, decision rights, performance expectations, and interdependencies. When strategic priorities are vague, accountability weakens because employees are unsure what success looks like and who owns which outcomes.
Without clarity, performance management becomes difficult and execution suffers.
A well-defined strategy helps organizations direct financial resources, talent, technology, and management attention toward the initiatives that matter most. When strategic priorities shift or are are misunderstood, resources often flow to lower-value projects while critical initiatives remain underfunded.
The result is slower execution, increased risk, and diminished returns on investment.
When strategy is unclear, communication becomes fragmented. Critical information may be delayed, overlooked, or shared inconsistently across teams. This creates confusion, frustration, and unnecessary duplication of effort.
Over time, collaboration declines and organizational agility suffers.
The Bottom Line
Can your employees explain your strategic priorities and the reasoning behind them in their own words? If not, your organization may already be experiencing the negative effects of misunderstood corporate strategies. Strategic clarity enables focus, accountability, smarter resource allocation, and effective execution. Without it, even the best strategy can fail to deliver results.
Most organizations spend months developing strategy and only weeks communicating it. Download Before You Cascade Your Corporate Strategy, Avoid These 3 Common Mistakes to learn what separates strategies that inspire action from those that create confusion.

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
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