Collin has a B.S. in Management Information Systems from Le Moyne College and a M.S. in Computer Science from Lawrence Technological University. He has been a software architect on enterprise systems, since 2010.
A strategy is a complex product with a defined structure built around the logic of its conclusions, which rest on the bedrock of its data and domain knowledge. Those elements allow a company to create a model, which is the theoretical scaffolding of an approach.
Conclusions Form the Logical Bedrock of a Strategy
A game plan has a hierarchical architecture. An institution constructs that framework, using iteration and incrementalism. One part of that scaffolding is domain knowledge and data. Those components interact with one another to form the wellspring from which an organization generates a strategy.
The Architecture of a Strategy and the Process for Building one
While strategies might vary, they possess a consistent set of pieces (data and domain knowledge, conclusions, model, process, and implementation) that interact in predictable ways. Those components are constructed by an organization, using iteration and incrementalism.