Thinking Sideways
Strategy execution for founders who build physical things. I spent 25 years translating founder vision into team execution. I write about what works when strategy has to survive reality.

Recent Thinking

18
Feb
Black-and-white industrial control panel with rows of switches and cables; one central switch stands out in vivid acid yellow under harsh side lighting

Your Company Runs on an Operating System You Never Designed

Most companies have values on the wall. Very few have values in the operating system. After twenty-five years of watching the gap between the two, I think I know where it breaks. Spoiler: it's not where the consultants are looking.
8 min read
11
Feb
Black and white aerial view of an industrial construction site with a single acid yellow structural beam cutting through raw concrete and steel.

The Green Transition Doesn't Need More Heroes. It Needs Better Architecture.

Most companies treat sustainability as a story to tell. The good ones build it into their products. Almost none treat it as what it actually is: a structural decision about how you run your business when nobody is looking. This article is the operational sequel to a conversation about purpose.
8 min read
04
Feb
Rowing oars pointing in different directions above dark water, one blade in acid yellow

Alignment: the comfortable illusion before execution collapses

Alignment doesn’t collapse with conflict. It collapses quietly when smart people execute different interpretations of the same plan. Clarity is not alignment. Alignment is not execution. And most organisations die in the gap.
7 min read
28
Jan
A machine built for momentum, paused mid-trajectory. One acid-yellow ball, caught between bumpers, waiting for the next force to make the system move

Incentives: the silent architect of strategy sabotage

If you want to align incentives with strategy, start here: strategy rarely fails in the slide deck. It fails in the reward system.
9 min read
21
Jan
Vintage black rotary telephone on a worn surface, with a bright yellow dial in focus against a blurred industrial background

Decision latency: the hidden tax on strategy execution

Most strategies don't die because they're flawed. They die because decisions arrive too late or never get revisited when the premises collapse. I've lived that silence. I know what it costs. Decision latency doesn't look like dysfunction. It looks like prudence. Until the market decides for you.
9 min read
12
Jan
Empty factory floor with wooden ballot box on metal table, paper slips scattered on ground, black and white industrial photography

Purpose isn't marketing. It's what you're willing to bleed for

Most brands treat purpose as communication. The ones that work treat it as cost. I've seen what it takes to close that gap. Purpose isn't marketing. It's strategy. And strategy requires sacrifice at every level, not just at the top.
7 min read
02
Jan
Top-down black and white aerial view of industrial pipelines converging into a single narrow tunnel, marked by an acid yellow safety stripe highlighting the bottleneck

When strategy lives in one head

Most organisations do not lack strategy in the absolute sense. What they lack is a strategy that is shared, articulated, and exposed enough to become usable by more than a handful of people.
7 min read
22
Dec
Top-down macro photograph of overlapping weathered documents and technical blueprints in black and white, with a single acid yellow diagonal line highlighting the layered paper texture.

Your plan is lying to you (and you already know it)

Your annual strategy deck says you're aligned. Your quarterly reviews say you're making progress. Your team nods in meetings. So why does every real decision still end up on your desk? Because what you're calling strategy is actually a well-formatted lie that everyone has agreed not to question.
7 min read