Why are some of the world's most successful companies able to stay ahead of disruption, adopting and implementing innovative strategies, while others struggle? It's not because they hire a new CEO or expensive consultants but rather because these pioneering companies have adopted a new way of strategizing. Instead of keeping strategic deliberations within the C-Suite, they open up strategic initiatives to a diverse group of stakeholders--front-line employees, experts, suppliers, customers, entrepreneurs, and even competitors. Open Strategy presents a new philosophy, key tools, step-by-step advice, and fascinating case studies--from companies that range from Barclays to Adidas--to guide business leaders in this groundbreaking approach to strategy.
The authors--business-strategy experts from both academia and management consulting--introduce tools for each of the three stages of strategy-making: idea generation, plan formulation, and implementation. These are digital tools (including strategy contests), which allow the widest participation; hybrid digital/in-person tools (including a "nightmare competitor challenge"); a workshop tool that gamifies the business model development process; and tools that help companies implement and sustain open strategy efforts.
Open strategy has an astonishing track record: a survey of 200 business leaders shows that although open-strategy techniques were deployed for only 30 percent of their initiatives, those same initiatives generated 50 percent of their revenues and profits. This book offers a roadmap for this kind of success.
Included in the Best Business Books of 2021 by the Globe & Mail
A Financial Times Best Business Book of the Month
Strategy + Business Best Business Books 2021, Strategy
"[A] substantive and eloquent book...Open strategy is more than a set of tactics or tweaks to an existing strategy. The authors set out the approach with such granularity and clarity that it is immediately actionable."
--Strategy + Business
"A useful blueprint."
--Financial Times
"Strategy is usually a closed, top-down affair, as a small group defines a new approach and, too often, it flops. The four professors share a different approach, opening key aspects of strategy-making up to front-line workers, others in the ranks, and even outsiders, tapping into differing perspectives and building enthusiasm for implementation."
--The Globe & Mail
". . . fascinating examples and evidence with step-by-step frameworks and tools for crowdsourcing, strategy jams, contests and competitions - all designed to garner wide perspectives and diverse thought in service of innovation."
--getAbstract