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How to Develop and Present a Strategy that Drives Results:

A Consultant’s Step-by-Step Guide

As a consultant, You get to work on lots of strategies and a common of all is making a bulky document with so many things in it. Your hard work, months of research and making multiple presentations, your strategy is now in 100 or 200 pages with only one limitation

The Challenge

Problem is not with the consultant or consultancy but the problem lies mostly on the client’s end, but at the end, your success does not lie in building a report & delivering it but in getting those recommendations implemented and seeing the growth which was promised. You won’t want frustrated teams, wasted resources, and missed opportunities for growth.

You see the success of your strategy in one company becomes the case study for the second client.
So it is in the interest of both parties that strategy gets implemented and the client gets the result.
And for that, consultants need to work on one more step after making a strategy, presenting it and delivery and that is simplifying the strategy.

Yes, sounds contradictory but true. One side you build such massive information, clubbed together to form the strategy in 100s of pages while on the other hand making it as easy as doing step number 1, 2, 3

But imagine how clear, effective and easy the same would be for clients and maybe the entire journey of growth doesn’t take 2-3 years but you get to see the results in a year or so
In this article, I ‘ll walk through a three-part framework that will change how you approach strategy development with your clients. This approach will help you create strategies that are easy to understand and implement and highly effective at attracting, converting, delighting, and retaining ideal customers.

Ever heard of simple scales? And this is true too.

As consultants, you often encounter clients who believe that more complexity equals better strategy. They’ve been conditioned to think that a proper strategic plan must be comprehensive enough to fill a three-ring binder or complex enough to require an advanced degree to understand. ( I remember in my school days I used to write two paper sheets just to answer a simple question to impress my teachers )
First, complex strategies often become shelf-ware – expensive documents that look impressive but never get implemented. When a strategy requires a team to constantly refer back to a massive document to understand what they should be doing, it’s already failed. Think about employees picking of docs and get lost in it, rather seeing light, ideas and ways to implement it

Second, excessive detail creates analysis paralysis.

When teams are faced with too many:

they often freeze, unable to determine what truly matters or which one to pick first. This paralysis leads to inaction, which is the death knell of any strategy ( ..and you don’t want that to happen)

Finally, complicated strategies create unnecessary friction in implementation. When team members need to constantly check whether their actions align with a complex web of strategic initiatives, they’re less likely to take decisive action, and more likely to wait for permission or clarification. 

This is where simplicity comes into the picture

The most effective strategies we've seen in our consulting work share one common trait: simplicity.

Simple strategies work because:

They’re easy to understand and remember. When team members can easily recall and articulate the strategy, they’re more likely to align their daily decisions with it. 

They facilitate quick decision-making. A simple strategy provides clear guidance for whether potential actions align with the company’s direction, enabling faster and more consistent choices throughout the organization. 

They increase buy-in across all levels. When everyone from the C-suite to front-line employees can grasp and explain the strategy, you create a shared vision that drives collective action. 

The Mindset of a "Simple Strategy"

Before diving into the framework that will change the way you present and deliver the strategy, it’s crucial to shift your clients’ mindset about what a strategy should be. ( And trust me I know it is one hell of a task)

 A strategy isn’t a detailed blueprint of every possible scenario and response.

Instead, think of it as a clear north star that guides decision-making and action.”

Remember: Simple gets followed. Complex gets ignored. And this is exactly what we even give in our presentations for consultants when they come to us for design say reports or strategy documents

This mindset shift is often the hardest part of the process for both consultants and clients. We need to help our clients understand that leaving things out of the strategy is just as important as what we put in. Like most of our clients come to us after going through & failing with Ai tools for presentation design 

Let’s review the Three Core Components of a Simple Strategy

The Tactical Tale

As consultants, we know there are so many challenges in their lives. While handling everything, data and analysis also play an important role in the project, but I still insist on working on the story as the tale drives action. The tactical tale isn’t about crafting a heartwarming story– it’s about creating a clear, compelling narrative that explains why your client’s strategic choices make sense. If required, take the help of a professional writer but work hard on it

The Framework

Let's break down the five key elements of an effective Strategy Story:

1. Explain the realities

Your saga should begin with a clear picture of the current market reality. Help your clients articulate:
– What’s happening in their industry right now?
– How do customers currently solve their problems?
– What are the dominant business models and approaches?
For example, if you’re working with a professional services firm, you might describe how their industry currently operates with traditional billable hours, rigid service packages, and minimal technology integration.

2. Explain Why It Sucks

Yes, this is where you help clients understand  the problems
– What inefficiencies exist in the current model?
– What frustrations do customers experience?
– What opportunities are being missed?
Using our professional services example, you might highlight how the billable hour model creates misaligned incentives, how rigid service packages fail to meet unique client needs, and how the lack of technology integration leads to inefficient processes.

3. Describe Your Unique Value

Help your clients understand what makes them different
– What unique capabilities or approaches do they bring?
– What combinations of skills or resources set them apart?
– What do they do better than anyone else?

4. Explain How This Gives You a Competitive Advantage

Show how their unique value translates into market success:
– How does their approach overcome the status quo problems?
– Why can’t competitors easily copy this approach?
– What sustainable advantages does this create?

5. Describe the Value Your Customers Get

Finally, connect everything to customer outcomes:
– What specific benefits do customers receive?
– How does this improve their situation?
– What meaningful differences will they experience?

Why This Story Matter?

The Strategy Story serves several crucial purposes:

Why Copying any story is dangerous?

As consultants, we must emphasize to our clients that while they can learn from others' strategies, copying them is dangerous. Each organization's Strategy Story should be unique because it:

Mission Blue Print

Once you’ve helped your clients craft their Tale of Strategy, the next step is distilling it into a clear, actionable blueprint. This is where many consulting engagements fail – they create complex mission statements that sound impressive but provide no real guidance.

The "Only > Better" Template

We recommend using Marty Neumeier’s Onlyness Statement framework, modified slightly for clarity and impact.

The template is:

“We are the ONLY [category] who offers [unique value] by doing [what you do differently]”

This simple structure forces clarity and specificity.

Let’s break it down:

1. The ONLY [category]

Defines the specific market space or category you’re competing in
– Should be narrow enough to be meaningful but broad enough to matter

2. Who offers [unique value]

– Articulates the specific benefit or outcome you provide
– Should be something customers actually care about

3. By doing [what you do differently]

– Explains how you deliver that unique value
– Should be specific and actionable

Examples of blueprint for different industries:

1. Professional Services:

“We are the ONLY management consultancy that delivers guaranteed ROI through our proprietary risk-sharing engagement model.”

2. Technology:

“We are the ONLY cybersecurity firm that provides real-time threat detection for IoT devices through our AI-powered edge computing platform.”

3. Healthcare:

“We are the ONLY primary care practice that offers same-day, comprehensive care through our integrated digital-physical delivery model.”

4. Financial Services:

“We are the ONLY wealth management firm that provides personalized, AI-driven investment strategies with a guaranteed minimum return.”

5. E-commerce:

“We are the ONLY online retailer that offers a 30-minute delivery guarantee for essential items through our network of urban micro-warehouses.”

6. Education:

“We are the ONLY online education platform that provides personalized, AI-powered learning pathways with a guaranteed improvement in student outcomes.”

7. Manufacturing:

“We are the ONLY contract manufacturer that offers a 100% quality guarantee through our proprietary, IoT-enabled quality control system.”

8. Travel:

“We are the ONLY luxury travel agency that provides personalized, AI-driven itinerary planning with a guaranteed upgrade to first-class accommodations.”

9. Food Delivery:

“We are the ONLY food delivery service that offers a 15-minute delivery guarantee for healthy, locally-sourced meals through our network of urban kitchens.”

10. Cybersecurity:

“We are the ONLY cybersecurity firm that provides real-time threat detection and response for cloud-based applications through our AI-powered security platform.”

11. Digital Marketing:

“We are the ONLY digital marketing agency that guarantees a 20% increase in sales conversions through our proprietary, AI-driven marketing optimization platform.”

The Importance of Clarity

The Strategy Statement serves as a constant reminder and filter for decision-making. It should be:

The Action List

The final component transforms strategy from theory to practice. As consultants, we know that execution is where most strategies fail. The Action List makes the strategy actionable by clearly stating what will and won’t be done.

The "Do List"

Help your clients identify:

1. Actions to Stop

– New initiatives that align with the strategy
– Capabilities that need to be developed
– Relationships that need to be built

2. Actions to Continue

– Existing activities that support the strategy
– Successful programs to expand
– Core competencies to strengthen

The "Kill List"

Equally important, identify:

1. Actions to Stop

– Projects that don’t align with the strategy
– Products or services to discontinue
– Practices that don’t add value

2. Actions to Never Start

– Tempting opportunities that would dilute focus
– Common industry practices that don’t fit your strategy
– Potential distractions to avoid

Implementation and Sharing

As consultants, our job isn’t done when the strategy is created – we need to ensure it gets implemented. Here’s how to help your clients make their strategy real:

Don't Keep It a Secret

The worst strategy is one that stays in the consultant’s PowerPoint deck. Encourage your clients to:

Creating Implementation Success

Guide your clients in:

1. Attracting Ideal Customers

– Help them align marketing and sales efforts with the strategy
– Ensure all customer-facing materials reflect the strategic positioning
– Design lead generation around their unique value proposition

2. Converting Prospects

– Create sales processes that demonstrate their unique value
– Develop proposals that align with their Strategy Statement
– Train teams to tell the Strategy Story Effectively

3. Delighting Customers

– Design delivery processes that fulfil the strategy’s promises – Create measurement systems to track customer satisfaction – Build feedback loops for continuous improvement

4. Keeping Customers

– Develop retention programs that reinforce their unique value – Create expansion opportunities aligned with the strategy – Build long-term relationships based on strategic differentiation

There is a great book “ Liberating Entrepreneurs” written by Harish K Saini, on how to generate leads, the importance of Qualifying  leads & how to qualify just to get started on these lines

Becoming the Only Choice

The ultimate goal of the Simple Strategy is to make your clients the obvious choice in their category. This happens when:

Conclusion

As consultants, our role is to help clients create strategies that work, not just impressive documents that gather dust. The Simple Strategy framework provides a clear path to developing strategies that are both meaningful and implementable.

Remember

The power of this approach lies in its simplicity. By helping your clients focus on these three core components – Story, Statement, and Action List – you’ll create strategies that don’t just sound good but actually drive results.

Take this framework to your next client engagement. Help them craft a strategy that’s simple enough to remember, clear enough to follow, and powerful enough to transform their business. Because in the end, the best approach isn’t the most complex – it’s the one that gets implemented and delivers results.