
We live in an increasingly complex world, but what often seems to be missing in company decision-making is an acceptance that we need to make choices.
Often, there’s a sense of “we can do everything” when faced with major decisions. But the reality is that nobody can cover every option. Everything is about the choices and trade-offs you make for your business.
Now, there’s a very fertile market in people who want to persuade you that you really can have everything you want. Those people are mostly con artists, or work in AI (but I repeat myself).
The reality is you can’t, though.
A relatively small number of strategic decisions set the template for your business. Once you’ve set that template, you’re pretty much betting the company on that working out.
For example, if you decide that your overarching objective is to minimise customer service costs, then you’ll probably fire all your call centre staff and replace them with AI bots.
The minute you make that decision, though, you effectively decide to run a purely transactional business where customer loyalty no longer matters.
Now, that’s a perfectly reasonable business decision, if you go into it with your eyes open, but now you’re locked into a very specific business model, whether you like it or not.
It means you’ll have to shift your marketing to an entirely “they do it for X, but we can do it for 10% less than X” model.
In the short-term, it’s entirely possible to run an outwardly successful business like that.
At least, until Amazon decides that you’re in a market they’d like to be in. Then you don’t have a business any more, because they’ll out-compete you on price every day of the week without breaking sweat.
Or until the Google ads or Facebook ads which drove traffic to your “we can do it for 10% less” offers dries up because your competitors, who all follow the same strategy, keep bidding up the click costs to the point where it becomes uneconomic to sell your products that way.
And it also means that at least a proportion of the people who used to buy from you might decide that AI-powered customer service and the relentless degradation of your products to keep that 10% price differential isn’t to their liking, so they end up taking their business elsewhere.
Remember, you don’t need everyone to do that for you to have a big problem on your hands. Most businesses, were they to lose just 5-10% of their customers, would quickly run out of cash.
So the choice that you make when you decide that the over-riding priority for customer service is to minimise the cost of delivering it means that you’re locked into all sorts of other decisions, many or all of which have the potential to backfire badly on you somewhere down the line.
“Strategy is about choices”
I’ve always loved that line from Michael Porter. Mostly because he’s absolutely right.
When you choose to do something, by default you decide not to do something else.
You can’t both shut down your call centre and also have high levels of personal service delivered by the people working in your call centre. It’s one or the other.
As a side note, it’s also why I get irritated about the word “strategy” popping up in places it has no business being, just so someone can feel important.
I don’t need an “expense claim strategy”. I just need someone to efficiently refund expenses incurred for business purposes by staff members.
So there’s no strategy there, because you have no choice to make – you’re going to give your staff their money back. There are just some practical decisions to be made about how to pay back business-related expenses to the staff who incurred them.
If there isn’t a very fundamental decision to be made, you don’t have a strategy at all because you have no fundamental choices to make. You just need to take care of something on a practical level.
There is a trick to this, though. You have to pitch the choice at the right level or you’re essentially gaming the decision-making process.
“First” businesses
A few years ago, it was fashionable to have a “digital-first” strategy. Now it’s common to have an “AI-first” strategy.
I can’t say this strongly enough, but neither of those decisions is a strategy-level consideration, although people are often tricked into thinking they are.
And that’s because the answer is in the question.
If you’ve already decided that digital is the way forward, from that point onwards you are only choosing from a range or digital options. Every non-digital option has, by definition, been excluded when you set a “digital-first strategy”.
That also means, by definition, if there is a better non-digital strategy, you will completely ignore that in favour of a worse outcome, because the decision has already been made that you are only able to select from the range of digital choices available.
From a business strategy point of view, this is nothing less than insane.
You might think I’m being a little harsh here, but when you set up your decision-making structure in a way which ensures your business can only choose from a range of sub-optimal outcomes, “insane” is the politest word I can think of to describe this.
You might well have a customer service strategy, within which there are some digital elements and some non-digital elements, for example, to reflect the areas in which each of those options is stronger.
But to have a digital-first strategy, and with that decision, rule out every other potential option – even options which offer a lower cost and better service than you have at the moment – is wild.
However the only reason businesses do that sort of thing is because tech vendors have essentially conned people into thinking they don’t need to make a choice, because…as if by magic…they can achieve perfection through a range of entirely digital options.
What this essentially does is outsource your strategic decision-making process to whichever shiny-suited salesperson has just waked into your office with a glitzy slide-deck in hand.
If you fall for that, good luck to you. You’re going to need it.
Strategic opposites
The great Rory Sutherland has a line about the opposite of a good strategy also being a good strategy.
So, a price-driven, high volume retailer like Asda can be successful. As can a high-price, high-touch business like Fortnum & Mason.
Their strategies are complete opposites, but both strategies make sense. The job of each of those businesses is to make sure all the other decisions they make are consistent with their respective strategies.
If Asda starts selling vintage brandy-infused cherries for making $100 cocktails, they’ve gone off-track. As would Fortnum & Mason selling bumper value family packs of own-brand cornflakes.
The key here is not that, on a product by product basis, both Asda and Fortnum & Mason, couldn’t probably articulate a business case to sell those products in their own right – I’m sure there would be a positive margin to be had.
It’s linking the decisions to do, or not to do, either of those things back to the strategy of being a value-led business or a providing a high-quality experience which is the really important part of the process.
Deciding to be digital-first, or AI-first, is like Fortnum & Mason having already decided to sell family packs of own-brand, value-priced cornflakes. Your only job is to put them on a shelf somewhere in the breakfast cereal aisle.
The key here is consistency – is the experience of your customers consistent with the market you are set up to serve or not?
Neither Asda nor Fortnum & Mason are “wrong”. They’re just different. And each behaves consistently within the strategic framework they’ve set as a value brand or a premium brand.
Both of those businesses are very clear about who they serve and what they offer. Customers make their own decisions about which organisation they want to spend their money with.
But neither Asda nor Fortnum & Mason are trying to serve everyone. Or pretending they could, even if they wanted to.
So why should you?
Logical consistency
Many tech solutions fall down due to a lack of understanding of the difference between Asda and Fortnum & Mason.
It is impossible to fire all the people working in Fortnum & Mason, switch everything to AI, and expect still to have a premium business in a few months’ time.
I don’t care what stats someone shows me about how much people love AI (those stats are all lies, by the way) but only a very small part of the reason people buy things from Fortnum & Mason is to get their hands on a specific product.
You could easily find ways to store and ship products using robots in a warehouse just off the M1 much more cheaply than you can sell using lots of human beings pacing the halls of a huge store located amongst some of the world’s most expensive real estate in the heart of London’s West End.
If lower prices and Amazon-like service were the primary driving factors for Fortnum & Mason shoppers, they wouldn’t have any customers.
So the strategic decision to make isn’t “digital-first”. It’s “what are the best decisions we can make which are consistent with our value-brand, or premium-brand, strategy?”
Some of those decisions may well be digital or AI-based. But not all of them. Perhaps only a minority of them.
Upgrading the tills at Fortnum & Mason might well be a sensible digital decision to speed up reporting, or help manage logistics better, for example. But that digital decision is still entirely inconsistent with the ethos of the business. People just want to swipe their credit cards efficiently and breeze off for tea at the Ritz.
Whereas shutting the store, flogging off the prime real estate, and getting everyone to order online would certainly be consistent with a digital-first strategy.
It would, however, probably end with customers leaving in droves for other fancy high-end retailers, because they’re not just buying a product from Fortnum & Mason. They are buying a high-quality end-to-end customer experience, which includes lots of high-touch intervention in an impossibly glamorous setting, none of which you can replicate digitally.
So if you’re tempted to go all-in on AI, or develop a digital-first strategy, just pause for a moment.
That makes no more sense than deciding to have Ford-first car-buying policy or an Asda-first cocktail ingredients policy.
Just by setting the parameters in a way which means you can only consider digital solutions – even when there are demonstrably better non-digital options – means you’ve likely set your business up for failure.
Keep your strategy decisions at the right level – it should be “how do we serve our target customer group more effectively?”, not “out of a range of sub-optimal decisions, which is the least worst?”.
To my continued astonishment, in an AI-first world, far too many businesses which ought to know better are, consciously or otherwise, taking the second of those two options.
Don’t copy their mistakes. “Digital” or “AI” isn’t a strategy. They are, at best, one of the ways in which you might choose to run a small part of your business.
Thinking otherwise means you’ve locked your business into a “tail wagging the dog” situation.
And that’s not smart. No matter how many statistics a tech salesperson has in their “you really can have everything you want, as if by magic” slide deck.








