What the Best Strategic Thinkers Do

Improving your strategic thinking might sound like a daunting task. With an ever-swelling ocean of information swirling about, it’s dizzying just imagining where to begin. The good news is becoming a great strategic thinker doesn’t start with endless web searches or petabytes of data to get going—it begins with simply setting time aside to think about the future

That sounds easy but it isn’t.  When people hear this advice, their response is often: “How do I set aside time to think about the future when I can’t even find time to finish the work I have today?” Here’s three simple steps you can follow to begin carving out the time you need.

  1. Make a Commitment. You’ve probably heard the phrase ‘a journey of a thousand miles starts with the first step.’ But even before you take the first step, you’ll need to make a commitment for the journey. A commitment says—to you especially—becoming a stronger strategic thinker is a priority. The demands of operational work will always crowd out strategic thinking, putting the important at the mercy of the urgent. Those who excel at peering into the future deliberately set aside time today to contemplate what it might look like.

  2. Find a Place. Not everyone does their best thinking in the same way or even in the same place. Some people can find solitude and peace of mind amidst the backdrop of a busy coffee shop. Others need the silence of a library to gain the clarity they need. Regardless of whether your best work is accomplished in the presence of a barista or alone in a quiet study room, locate a place where you can retreat and let your imagination run free.

  3. Set a Routine. It would be wonderful if during your first thinking session you conjured your company’s next big product idea. Wonderful yes; likely, no. Becoming a great strategic thinker requires a routine. To start, block a time as short as 15 minutes on your calendar, every week, (and hold it no matter what) to start developing your point of view about what the future may bring.

As romantic as the blinding flash of insight sounds, most great ideas don’t come that way. It took Thomas Edison thousands of experiments to develop the incandescent lightbulb. Hopefully, your greatest discoveries won’t require that long; but like Edison, they’ll need commitment, a familiar place, and a regular routine to turn your thoughts into your own breakthrough thinking.

If you’d like to learn more about strategic thinking, check out the Twelve Skills brief Mastering Strategic Thinking as well as all of the other Twelve Skills topics.

Serious about improving your skills? Get the companion guide to the Twelve Skills book the Twelve Skills Strategic Thinking Workbook. Packed with thought provoking activities, hands on exercises, and bonus material, it’s a proven way to boost your knowhow. Best of all, IT’S FREE! 

Get your own complimentary copy here.

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Four Steps to Thinking More Strategically

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