Strategic Thinking: Instructor Preparation Guide
Course Summary
A 360-minute seminar developing the cognitive capabilities for strategic thinking. Covers systems thinking, futures analysis, mental models, and strategic conversation. Emphasizes that strategic thinking is a learnable skill, not innate talent.
Key Learning Outcomes
- Participants understand and can apply systems thinking
- Participants can conduct horizon scanning and scenario planning
- Participants can surface and test limiting mental models
- Participants can facilitate strategic conversations that elevate thinking
Time Allocation
- Opening & Frame: 15 minutes
- Module 1: Foundations: 40 minutes
- Module 2: Systems Thinking: 60 minutes (includes system mapping exercise)
- Break: 15 minutes
- Module 3: Futures Thinking: 65 minutes (includes scenario planning)
- Module 4: Mental Models: 45 minutes
- Module 5: Strategic Conversation: 45 minutes
- Closing: 20 minutes
Teaching Philosophy
- Strategic thinking is a skill, not talent - this is learnable
- Most people are capable of deeper thinking than current organizational systems demand
- Create space for thinking vs. just processing information
- Connect concepts to participants' actual strategic challenges
- Model the thinking you're teaching
Module-by-Module Teaching Notes
Module 1: Foundations
The opening frames strategic thinking as sophisticated pattern recognition - noticing connections others miss.
Key Point to Emphasize: Strategic thinking requires both analytical rigor AND intuitive pattern recognition. It's not pure logic or pure gut feel.
Discussion Starters:
- "Think of a strategic leader you respect. What's their best thinking process?"
- "What prevents us from thinking strategically in the day-to-day?"
Module 2: Systems Thinking
The most important module. Most failure to implement strategy comes from underestimating system dynamics and unintended consequences.
Key Point to Emphasize: "You can't change one part of a system without affecting everything else. That's not a flaw of your implementation - that's how systems work."
Story to Tell: Share an example where a well-intentioned change created unintended consequences. Make it relatable to participants' context.
Module 3: Futures Thinking
Scenario planning is less about prediction accuracy and more about building organizational flexibility.
Key Point to Emphasize: "We can't predict the future, but we can prepare for it. Scenario planning builds organizational resilience."
Activity Focus: Make the scenario planning exercise real for participants. Use their actual industry/market.
Module 4: Mental Models
Personal and organizational mental models often limit strategy without people realizing it.
Key Point to Emphasize: "We don't see the world as it is. We see it through the lens of our mental models. Upgrading mental models upgrades strategic capability."
Activity Focus: Use real mental models from participants' industries/organizations.
Module 5: Strategic Conversation
Strategic thinking doesn't happen alone - it emerges from quality conversations.
Key Point to Emphasize: "The best strategic thinking happens when diverse perspectives are integrated through rigorous conversation."
Interactive Exercises
Exercise 1: System Mapping (25 minutes)
Setup: Choose system relevant to participants' industry
Instructions:
- Identify key components and actors (5 min)
- Map connections and feedback loops (10 min)
- Discuss: Where might unintended consequences emerge? (10 min)
Facilitation Notes: This is challenging for people used to linear thinking. Push them to identify reinforcing and balancing loops. Show how changing one element affects many others.
Exercise 2: Horizon Scanning (20 minutes)
Setup: Provide emerging trends in their industry
Instructions:
- Present weak signals (3 min)
- Small groups assess: What's the threat/opportunity? How soon? (8 min)
- Discuss: What should we do about this? (9 min)
Facilitation Notes: Emphasize that early detection matters. Trends that are obvious are often too late.
Exercise 3: Scenario Development (30 minutes)
Setup: Real strategic uncertainty participants face
Instructions:
- Identify 2-3 key uncertainties (5 min)
- Create 2-3 scenarios (10 min)
- For each: Implications for our organization? Required capabilities? (10 min)
- Discuss robust strategies (5 min)
Facilitation Notes: The goal isn't predicting correctly. The goal is thinking through multiple possibilities and building flexibility.
Exercise 4: Mental Model Surfacing (15 minutes)
Setup: Provide business situation with assumed "right answer"
Instructions:
- Ask what assumption people are making (3 min)
- List assumptions on board (3 min)
- Question each: Is this actually true? What if it's wrong? (6 min)
- Discuss: How might our strategy change? (3 min)
Facilitation Notes: This is uncomfortable because it challenges how people typically think. Create safety for exploring "dumb" questions.
Exercise 5: Strategic Conversation (25 minutes)
Setup: Real strategic challenge one of participants provides
Instructions:
- Present the challenge (2 min)
- Model strategic conversation: Ask great questions (8 min)
- Facilitate: Let participants ask questions and think (10 min)
- Debrief: What kind of questions elevated thinking? (5 min)
Facilitation Notes: Show the difference between defensive questions ("Don't you think...?") and genuine inquiry ("What am I missing?").
Discussion Facilitation Tips
- Use "and" instead of "but" to integrate multiple perspectives
- Ask "what if we're wrong?" when people become confident
- Bring in outside perspective: "What would our competition say about this?"
- Connect back to system dynamics: "How would that change affect other parts of the organization?"
- Create space for silence - let people think, don't fill every pause
Common Participant Challenges
"This is too theoretical. How does it apply?"
Response: "Strategic thinking is exactly how you solve your real challenges. Let's apply this framework to the situation you're facing..."
"We don't have time for scenario planning."
Response: "The time cost of scenario planning is small compared to the cost of being surprised by change. Which would you rather invest in?"
"Our organization won't think strategically."
Response: "That's often true - because we're not creating space for it. As a leader, you can create that space on your team. Show them what strategic thinking looks like."
Differentiation
For experienced strategic leaders: Deep dive on systems dynamics and complexity; introduce complexity theory concepts
For new leaders: Focus on building confidence; provide simpler frameworks; connect to their current challenges
For technical/analytical people: Introduce scenario thinking and mental model testing as systematic approaches
For more intuitive people: Validate their pattern recognition; add structure to capture and test their insights
Materials Needed
- System mapping template
- Scenario planning template
- Mental model worksheet
- Horizon scanning checklist
- Strategic conversation question guide
- Real case studies from participants' industries
- Whiteboard/flip chart for system mapping
Reinforcement & Follow-Up
- Share scenario planning templates
- Provide strategic conversation question guide
- Offer to facilitate scenario planning session with their team
- Suggest monthly "strategic thinking" discussion in leadership meetings
- Recommend books: "The Fifth Discipline" (Senge), "Playing to Win" (Lafley), "Thinking in Systems" (Meadows)
Closing Key Points
- Strategic thinking is learnable capability you can develop
- Quality conversation multiplies your thinking capability
- Prepare for multiple futures rather than predicting one
- Continuously upgrade mental models as conditions change
- Organizations that think strategically adapt faster and succeed more often