good-strategy-bad-strategy
について
このスキルは、リチャード・ルメルトの診断・指針・一貫した行動というフレームワークを用いて、開発者が戦略を策定し監査することを支援します。戦略文書のレビュー時、目標リストを実際の戦略に変換する時、あるいは計画文書の曖昧な表現を検出する際に発動します。本スキルは、戦略の核となる要素、悪い戦略の検出、および力の源泉の特定に焦点を当てています。
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ドキュメント
Good Strategy Bad Strategy
A framework for creating and auditing strategy, distilled from Richard Rumelt's Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters. Good strategy has a simple underlying logic — an honest diagnosis of the critical challenge, a guiding policy for overcoming it, and coherent actions that carry the policy out. Use this skill to detect the four hallmarks of bad strategy and to replace goal lists and vision decks with a working kernel.
Core Principle
Strategy is coherent action backed by an honest diagnosis — not goals, vision, or wishful thinking. A goal ("20% growth") names an ambition; a strategy explains how the ambition will be achieved given the actual obstacles. Bad strategy is not the absence of strategy but an active substitute for it: buzzword fluff, refusal to name the challenge, and laundry lists of initiatives. The heart of strategy work is choice — concentrating effort and resources on the one or two pivotal objectives whose accomplishment unlocks everything else.
Scoring
Goal: 10/10. Rate strategies, plans, and strategy documents 0-10 against the principles below. Report the current score and the specific changes needed to reach 10/10.
- 9-10: Complete kernel — honest diagnosis, choiceful guiding policy, coordinated resource-backed actions — aimed at a pivot point, with an explicit list of what will not be done
- 7-8: Kernel present but one element weak: thin diagnosis, a policy that rules little out, or actions not yet coordinated and funded
- 5-6: The challenge is named, but the plan is a list of independent initiatives and some goals masquerade as strategy
- 3-4: Mostly goals, targets, and vision statements; no diagnosis; fluff in key passages; nothing ruled out
- 0-2: Pure bad strategy — buzzword fluff, dog's-dinner objective lists, denial of the real challenge
Framework
1. The Kernel of Good Strategy
Core concept: Every good strategy shares the same structure: a diagnosis that defines and simplifies the critical challenge, a guiding policy — the overall approach chosen to overcome the diagnosed obstacles — and coherent actions: coordinated, resource-backed steps that carry out the policy. A document missing any of the three is not yet a strategy.
Why it works: A diagnosis replaces the overwhelming complexity of reality with a simpler story that highlights what is critical, often by analogy to a known pattern. The guiding policy channels effort by ruling out vast realms of possible action — like guardrails, it directs without dictating every move. Coherent actions turn intent into coordinated force; most plans fail by jumping straight from ambition to a list of independent initiatives.
Key insights:
- The diagnosis is the strategy's pivot: Gerstner reframed IBM's 1993 challenge from "mainframes are dying, break the company up" to "our advantage is integrated capability; the obstacle is internal coordination" — and everything downstream changed
- A guiding policy is not a goal or a vision — it is an approach ("ride wave X by concentrating on Y"), and a real one feels like a choice with losers
- If a competitor could paste your guiding policy into their deck unchanged, it is a platitude, not a policy
- Coherent actions reinforce one another — each step makes the others easier — and every one carries an owner, resources, and a date
- A kernel needs no mission, vision, or values preamble; it fits on one page
- Most failed "strategies" skip the diagnosis entirely — prescribing before examining
Applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Annual planning | Kernel before targets | Diagnosis: week-one churn; policy: fastest time-to-value in segment; actions: onboarding rebuild + roadmap cuts |
| Strategy review | Trace each action to the policy | Initiative serving no policy → cut or re-justify |
| Pitch deck | Kernel slide, not goals slide | "The obstacle, our approach, three coordinated moves" |
Ethical boundary: An honest diagnosis names internal causes too — never soften it to protect egos or settle politics.
See: references/kernel.md
2. Detecting Bad Strategy
Core concept: Bad strategy is not the absence of strategy — it is its own species with four hallmarks: fluff (gibberish masquerading as strategic concepts), failure to face the challenge, mistaking goals for strategy, and bad strategic objectives (dog's-dinner laundry lists or blue-sky impracticalities).
Why it works: Naming the hallmarks turns a vague sense that "this deck says nothing" into specific, fixable findings. Bad strategy persists for identifiable reasons — choice is painful, templates are easy, and positive thinking feels like leadership — so detection must hunt for substitutes for choice, not just bad writing.
Key insights:
- Fluff test: restate the sentence in plain words — "our fundamental strategy is customer-centric intermediation" collapses to "we are a bank," which says nothing
- If the document never names the obstacle, the strategy cannot be evaluated or improved — International Harvester's 1979 plan never mentioned its toxic labor relations, the actual problem
- "20% growth, 20% margin" is a goal; exhortation to push harder is motivation, not a lever — strategy is the lever
- Dog's dinner: a city plan with 47 "strategies" and 178 action items has no strategy; blue-sky: "become the leading platform" restates the end state and skips the how
- Bad strategy has causes: unwillingness to choose (every real choice creates losers — DEC's consensus produced mush), template-style vision-mission-values planning, and New Thought culture (belief that visualizing success produces it)
- The negation test: if the opposite of a statement is absurd ("we will not be customer focused"), the statement carries no information
Applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Strategy deck audit | Score sections against the four hallmarks | "Vision" slide flagged as fluff; no obstacle named anywhere |
| OKR review | Separate ambitions from mechanisms | "Double signups" kept as goal, paired with an explicit how |
| Board update | Demand the challenge slide | "What we're up against" before "what we'll achieve" |
Ethical boundary: Audit the document, not the people — bad strategy is usually a process failure, not bad faith.
See: references/bad-strategy.md
3. Sources of Power
Core concept: Good strategy applies strength where it has the greatest effect, drawing on recurring sources of power: leverage (anticipation, pivot points, concentration), proximate objectives (targets close enough to actually hit), chain-link systems (quality matched across links), design (premeditated, coordinated configuration), focus, and using advantage (asymmetries protected by isolating mechanisms).
Why it works: Resources are always scarce relative to ambitions. Power comes from asymmetry — knowing something rivals don't, pressing where effort is amplified, or concentrating where they are spread thin. A strategy that names no source of power is hoping effort alone will win, which is matching strength against strength.
Key insights:
- Leverage = anticipation × pivot point × concentration: anticipate predictable behavior, find the point where effort is amplified, then commit past the threshold where results become visible
- A proximate objective is one the team can see how to hit; under high ambiguity, choose closer targets — a JPL engineer made Moon-lander design feasible by simply deciding a lunar soil model others could build against
- In chain-link systems, performance is capped by the weakest link — investing in strong links is wasted until the weak one is fixed, which is why such systems stay stuck
- A fully matched chain is also the deepest moat: IKEA's in-house design, flat-pack logistics, and warehouse showrooms each fit the others, so copying one link gains a rival nothing
- Design-type strategy — tight, premeditated coordination of parts — pays when stakes are high and resources scarce; integration buys performance at the cost of flexibility
- An advantage matters only at the point of contention: deepen it, broaden it, or strengthen isolating mechanisms (network effects, brand, patents, tacit know-how) that block imitation
Applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Startup wedge choice | Concentrate past the threshold | One vertical owned end-to-end, not five touched |
| Stalled growth | Chain-link diagnosis | Fix activation (weakest link) before scaling paid acquisition |
| Ambiguous roadmap | Set a proximate objective | "Ten fintech design partners live" not "be the leader" |
Ethical boundary: Build isolating mechanisms on delivered value — lock-in engineered purely to trap users eventually isolates you from them.
See: references/sources-of-power.md
4. Riding Dynamics and Fighting Inertia
Core concept: Waves of change — technology shifts, deregulation, demographic change — are the attacker's best friend: they redistribute advantage and reset rules the incumbents had mastered. Incumbents are held back by three kinds of inertia (routine, culture, proxy) and by entropy — the unmanaged drift into blur and waste.
Why it works: In stable periods incumbents win on scale and accumulated advantage; in transitions their strengths become anchors — they defend legacy margins, rerun obsolete playbooks, and answer to cultures built for the old world. You don't need to predict the future, only to recognize that the present has already changed and act on it before those who can't.
Key insights:
- Guideposts for sensing waves: rising fixed costs (force consolidation), deregulation or rule changes, predictable biases (people extrapolate the present), incumbent response (watch them protect old margins), and attractor states (where the industry "should" land given the technology)
- An attractor state disciplines hype: ask "in the end state, who does the work and who gets paid?" — "all data transport becomes IP" correctly guided Cisco's rise
- Inertia by routine yields to new metrics and outside hires; inertia by culture requires simplification and breaking insulated units; inertia by proxy means the incumbent profits from its customers' inertia — banks kept paying low deposit rates because depositors were slow to move
- A rival's inertia is an exploitable asymmetry: attack where responding would force them to break their own economics
- Entropy shows up as blurred product lines, drifting prices, and accidental cross-subsidies — weeding it is real strategy work even with no competitor in sight
Applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Platform shift | Read the guideposts | Model training costs consolidate; value migrates to workflow owners |
| Pricing attack | Exploit margin defense | Usage-based pricing a seat-license incumbent can't match |
| Mature product | Entropy audit | Three overlapping plans collapsed into one clean ladder |
Ethical boundary: Ride waves by serving the new need better — never by manufacturing fear about the old one.
See: references/dynamics-inertia.md
5. Thinking Like a Strategist
Core concept: A strategy is a hypothesis about what will work, not a deduction from goals. Work like a scientist — diagnose, formulate, test against evidence, revise — and use deliberate techniques (create-destroy, the virtual panel of experts, a written first-person kernel) to defend judgment against first conclusions and herd opinion.
Why it works: The mind grabs the first plausible frame and defends it; groups converge on comfortable consensus. The market is an expensive place to discover you were wrong — cheap, disciplined destruction of your own ideas before commitment buys that learning early.
Key insights:
- Treat strategy as a hypothesis and the market as the lab: Howard Schultz's Italian espresso-bar concept survived because he kept revising it against evidence — dropped the opera music, added chairs, offered nonfat milk
- Create-destroy: generate genuinely different alternatives, then attack your own front-runner as hard as you would attack a rival's plan
- Convene a virtual panel of experts: simulate the specific critiques of people whose judgment you respect — borrowed standards beat solo blind spots
- First conclusions are the enemy; before accepting any diagnosis ask "what else could be going on?"
- Keep the kernel written down — a strategy that lives in your head is unfalsifiable — with the list of what you choose not to do beside it
- Independent judgment matters most when the crowd agrees: the market capitalized Global Crossing's hype while the underlying numbers said otherwise
Applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Quarterly review | Re-test the diagnosis | Churn data contradicts it → kernel revised, not defended |
| Big bet | Create-destroy before commit | A second team builds the case against the acquisition |
| Founder discipline | Written kernel + no-list | One page: diagnosis, policy, three actions, five explicit nots |
Ethical boundary: Use the virtual panel to find flaws, not to stage imagined authority blessing a foregone conclusion.
See: references/case-studies.md
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Mistaking goals for strategy | "20% growth" names desire, not the lever that produces it | Write the kernel: diagnosis → policy → coherent actions |
| Skipping the diagnosis | Prescribing before examining; plan solves the wrong problem | One-paragraph diagnosis of the critical challenge first |
| Template planning (vision-mission-values) | Fill-in-the-blank boilerplate substitutes for analysis and choice | Start from the obstacle, not the template |
| Fluff in key passages | Buzzwords hide the absence of thought; nothing is testable | Restate plainly; if it becomes obvious or empty, cut it |
| Refusing to choose | Pleasing every stakeholder concentrates nothing | Name what you will not do; accept that choice creates losers |
| Dog's-dinner objectives | Forty "priorities" means none; resources spread to uselessness | Pick one to three proximate objectives; park the rest |
| Blue-sky objectives | Restates the desired end state; the team cannot see how | Choose targets close enough to actually hit |
| Spreading resources evenly | Below-threshold effort everywhere produces results nowhere | Concentrate on the pivot point until wins are visible |
| Treating strategy as settled truth | Conditions change; a defended diagnosis goes stale | Review as a hypothesis; revise on evidence, on a cadence |
Quick Diagnostic
| Question | If No | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Does the document name the critical challenge? | Nothing can be evaluated or improved | Write the one-paragraph diagnosis before any goals |
| Is there a guiding policy that rules out whole classes of action? | It is a platitude, not a policy | Add "therefore we will not..." statements until it bites |
| Are actions coordinated and resource-backed? | It is a wish list | Give each action an owner, budget, date, and a reinforcing role |
| Would the strategy be wrong for your nearest competitor? | It is generic fluff | Anchor it in your specific asymmetries and obstacles |
| Is the first objective close enough to actually hit? | Blue-sky target; the team stalls | Set a proximate objective with an owner and a done-test |
| Does the plan exploit a wave, asymmetry, or rival's inertia? | Strength is matched against strength | Find leverage: anticipation, pivot point, concentration |
| Is there an explicit list of what you will not do? | Scope creeps back to everything | Write the no-list next to the action list |
| Has anyone tried to destroy this strategy before adopting it? | First conclusions ship untested | Run create-destroy with a virtual panel of experts |
Reference Files
- references/kernel.md — Writing a kernel: diagnosis craft, guiding-policy formulation, coherent-action design, a full template, two worked examples
- references/bad-strategy.md — Detection checklists for the four hallmarks, before/after rewrites, why bad strategy proliferates, deck-audit procedure
- references/sources-of-power.md — Leverage, proximate objectives, chain-link systems, design, focus, and advantage, with when-to-use guidance
- references/dynamics-inertia.md — Guideposts for spotting waves of change, diagnosing inertia types and entropy, attacker playbooks
- references/case-studies.md — Three scenarios: a SaaS annual plan audit, a startup concentration decision, a vision deck rewritten into a kernel
Further Reading
- "Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters" by Richard Rumelt
- "The Crux: How Leaders Become Strategists" by Richard Rumelt
- "Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works" by A.G. Lafley & Roger L. Martin
- "7 Powers: The Foundations of Business Strategy" by Hamilton Helmer
About the Author
Richard Rumelt is professor emeritus at UCLA Anderson School of Management and one of the world's most influential thinkers on strategy — McKinsey Quarterly dubbed him "the strategist's strategist," and The Economist named him among the 25 most influential living management thinkers. He distilled four decades of research and consulting into Good Strategy Bad Strategy (2011) and The Crux (2022).
GitHub リポジトリ
Frequently asked questions
What is the good-strategy-bad-strategy skill?
good-strategy-bad-strategy is a Claude Skill by wondelai. Skills package instructions and resources that Claude loads on demand, so Claude can perform good-strategy-bad-strategy-related tasks without extra prompting.
How do I install good-strategy-bad-strategy?
Use the install commands on this page: add good-strategy-bad-strategy to Claude Code as a plugin, or clone its repository into your skills directory, then restart Claude so it picks up the skill.
What category does good-strategy-bad-strategy belong to?
good-strategy-bad-strategy is in the Meta category, tagged testing and design.
Is good-strategy-bad-strategy free to use?
Yes. good-strategy-bad-strategy is listed on AIMCP and free to install. It runs inside Claude, so no separate service account is required to use the skill itself.
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