CSOsandbox: Corporate Strategy and Operations
Strategy is changing.
CSOsandbox explores how organisations are moving beyond static plans toward living systems of decision, adaptation and governance – and what that means in practice for leaders responsible for real outcomes.
Grounded in real corporate strategy work, each episode looks at how strategy actually operates at the point where strategic outlook becomes judgement, judgement becomes commitment, and commitment becomes consequence.
We explore:
- why strategy fails even when execution appears sound
- how decision‑making, not planning, determines performance
- how governance shapes the quality and timing of strategic choices
- what new capabilities CSOs, CFOs, COOs and CEOs need as environments become more complex and fast‑moving
This is not a podcast about better planning.
It is about how corporate strategy and operations are being re‑thought and re‑formed – from a periodic process into an ongoing system of Strategic Intelligence, Judgement, Commitment and Renewal.
Built for CSOs (Corporate Strategy and Operations), CFOs, COOs, CEOs and senior leaders working at the intersection of strategy, finance, risk and organisational performance.
For essays, case material and diagrams that sit behind the conversations, visit:
https://www.phsandl.com
CSOsandbox: Corporate Strategy and Operations
When Strategy Blindness Becomes a Governance Failure (Strategy Brief #7)
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This episode of the CFO Strategy Brief explores how “strategy blindness” at board level turns into a governance failure, and why most large corporations still treat strategy as an annual ritual rather than a continuous, governable system. Drawing on research across the Fortune 500 and Australia’s ASX 50, it shows how disclosure calendars, legal frameworks, and board practices lock strategy into episodic cycles, leaving boards excellent at cost, capital and compliance but effectively blind to the ongoing formation and renewal of strategy itself. Through cases including Ford’s EV write‑down, Boeing’s 737 MAX, GE’s long decline, and Australian exemplars like BHP and Commonwealth Bank, the episode illustrates how untested strategic assumptions, weak scenario discipline, and absent “green shoots” portfolio governance destroy value at scale.
The episode then reframes the CFO as “necessary friction” in governance: the question‑holder who surfaces uncomfortable strategic risks early, the assumption‑challenger who insists on scenario work and decision triggers for big bets, and the visibility‑enabler who sponsors strategic‑intelligence systems that make regeneration capacity visible to the board between earnings seasons and AGMs. It concludes with three practical actions for CFOs: changing the questions asked in board strategy sessions, commissioning a regeneration governance assessment, and building or acquiring strategic‑intelligence capability (such as Power BI–based platforms) so boards can govern strategy formation and renewal, not just retrospective financial outcomes.
Research referred to in this episode is based on the following:
Access to the White Paper and associated citations upon which this podcast is based can be found at https://www.smiknowledge.com/resources.
Strategy Brief explores how CFOs, CEOs, boards and executive teams make better strategic decisions in uncertain environments.
Each episode examines the relationship between strategy, governance, judgement, accountability and organisational performance.
Topics include:
- strategic decision-making
- governance and leadership
- Strategic Intelligence
- organisational renewal
- managing uncertainty
- strategy implementation
- executive judgement
Built for CFOs, CEOs, directors and senior leaders responsible for making consequential decisions.
Explore Strategic Intelligence resources, especially our pages on Strategic Intelligence: https://www.phsandl.com/strategicintelligence