What’s the magic word these days, strategy?
Because I have to ask, what actually makes a company great?
Is it the awards? The software? The return to office mandates? The endless systems and process changes that somehow make everything more complicated but never better?
Is it leadership that rebrands failure as transformation, then asks employees to trust the next pivot?
Is it accountability, or just accountability for everyone below a certain level?
Maybe greatness now means HR has enough time to monitor salaried employees’ attendance but not enough influence to protect institutional knowledge, experience, or morale.
And maybe AI really is the perfect corporate employee. It never pushes back, never says “this does not make sense,” and never reminds leadership that people actually matter.
But what is the strategy here? Not the slogan. Not the slide deck. The actual strategy.
Because from where a lot of employees sit, it does not look like a strategy. It looks like churn. New systems, new processes, new messaging, new priorities, every few months, while the people who know how the business actually works are treated like interchangeable parts.
A company is not great because it says it is. It is great when leadership knows where it is going, tells the truth about where it is, and respects the people who built the place before asking them to believe in the next transformation. Endless transformation isn't "transformation" it's chaos that drives poor quality, subpar results and unhappy employees.