Welcome back!
Last time, we cracked open the box and discovered that the “strategy” was really a stack of inherited decisions, held together with assumptions, good intentions, a few layers of duct tape, and the occasional vendor relationship nobody can fully explain. We watched it come apart under a divestiture, get reassembled in real time, and somehow deliver. The story made the point.
Now let’s get tactical, because knowing the box is a mess isn’t the same as knowing how to assemble what’s inside. Doing so takes power, decision rights, discipline, and governance that is not a blocker and actually moves business forward.
Sold separately, naturally.
Why Build A Roadmap At All?
Because you have one, whether you designed it or not. The question isn’t whether you have a strong one that can keep up. The question is whether yours can be taken apart without breaking.
If the answer is no, you have a monument, not a fluid strategy.
My Perspective
Most value-creating models are assembled by accident, not designed on purpose.
Strategy doesn’t fail at the strategy layer — it fails at the assembly layer underneath.
The parts that look most stable are usually the ones welded together with assumptions nobody has tested in years.
Adaptability is a property of the system, not the leader. A sharp CIO inside a rigid strategy still loses to a steady CIO inside a flexible one.
An M&A event brings existing weaknesses in a playbook into clear view.
Here’s a question I ask the leaders I work with:
If a deal landed on your desk tomorrow — buy-side or sell-side — which parts of your strategy move with you and which parts would have to be rebuilt from scratch?
Look at your architecture. Are the components actually independent, or is changing one of them a six-month design exercise?
Look at your contracts. Are the exits clean, or are you quietly locked into scope, scale, and timelines that won’t survive a pivot?
Look at your governance. Are the guardrails enabling movement, or have they become the bottleneck dressed up as discipline?
Look at your talent model. Can teams reform around new priorities, or are roles tied to a structure that hasn’t been reexamined in years?
Look at your decision rights. Who actually has authority to move — and how many people have to nod before anything changes?
Where the answers stall, that’s where your “modular” strategy is welded shut.
Why This Matters Now
CIOs are operating in environments where the next disruption is already in the building.
AI mandates are landing on top of tech strategies that weren’t designed to absorb them.
Deal velocity is rising — buy-side, sell-side, carve-out, separation — and integration timelines are compressing.
Cost pressure is forcing reorgs faster than governance can keep up.
The gap between decision velocity and deliberation is widening every quarter.
If your tech strategy can’t take a punch, every one of those is a crisis. If it can, every one of those is an opportunity.
The CIO’s Real Job
The role is to take responsibility for the system that executes the strategy and to ensure that it is built from components that can be reconfigured as the strategy evolves. And it will. That means designing for:
Modularity: components with clear boundaries, not welded subsystems
Interoperability: interfaces that connect cleanly so that swapping a piece doesn’t break three others
Reconfigurability: the ability to take it apart and put it back together without rebuilding from zero
Decision velocity: clarity on who decides, how fast, and at what altitude
Investment flexibility (get creative): funding models that can move when priorities move
That’s the difference between a fluid tech strategy and a monument.
My Point Of View
“Rather than a value-creating strategy, most CIOs have inherited a collection of decisions that happen to coexist. The failure shows up the moment something forces the pieces to move at the same time and the welds reveal themselves where the design should have been.”
The Takeaway
The CIOs who thrive treat strategy as something to design, test, and occasionally take apart on purpose before something else does it for them. Strategy is only as strong as the mechanism that must deliver it. And the plan is only as strong as the joints that hold it together.
Assemble for change now — or rebuild under pressure later.
I Want To Hear From You
Is your strategy designed to come apart and go back together, or is it held in place by duct tape you haven’t pressure-tested in years?
I welcome your perspective. Drop a comment or connect with me via email: [email protected].



















