The differences between strategy and tactics

RealKM Magazine
RealKM Magazine
Published in
2 min readJun 23, 2016

In a blog post, Jeremiah Owyang says that “strategy” and “tactics” need to work in tandem for an organisation to efficiently achieve its goals, but that these terms are often used incorrectly.

To assist understanding, Owyang breaks down the differences between “strategy” and “tactics”:

Purpose

  • Strategy: To identify clear broader goals that advance the overall organisation and organise resources.
  • Tactics: To utilize specific resources to achieve sub-goals that support the defined mission.

Roles

  • Strategy: Individuals who influence resources in the organisation. They understand how a set of tactics work together to achieve goals.
  • Tactics: Specific domain experts that maneuver limited resources into actions to achieve a set of goals.

Accountability

  • Strategy: Held accountable to overall health of organisation.
  • Tactics: Held accountable to specific resources assigned.

Scope

  • Strategy: All the resources within the organisations, as well as broader market conditions including competitors, customers, and economy. Yet don’t overthink it. To paraphrase Owyang’s business partner Charlene Li, “Strategy is often what you don’t do”.
  • Tactics: A subset of resources used in a plan or process. Tactics are often specific tactics with limited resources to achieve broader goals.

Duration

  • Strategy: Long Term, changes infrequently.
  • Tactics: Shorter Term, flexible to specific market conditions.

Methods

  • Strategy: Uses experience, research, analysis, thinking, then communication.
  • Tactics: Uses experiences, best practices, plans, processes, and teams.

Outputs

  • Strategy: Produces clear organisational goals, plans, maps, guideposts, and key performance measurements.
  • Tactics: Produces clear deliverables and outputs using people, tools, time.

Originally published at RealKM.

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RealKM Magazine
RealKM Magazine

RealKM brings you the findings of high-value knowledge management (KM) research in concise, practically-oriented articles.