Can Strategic Thinking Be Developed?: Mindset, Skill, and Daily Practice
Episode overview
In this episode of The Reflective Professional, host Chris Cahill sits down with strategist, author, and coach Rich Horwath to explore how leaders can move from tactical busyness to true strategic impact. Drawing on 25 years of work with leaders across industries, Rich argues that strategic thinking is both a mindset and a skill—and that it can absolutely be improved with deliberate practice.
The conversation digs into why “strategy” is often misunderstood, how to create a common language for your team, and what it really means to treat strategy as the “how” behind your goals. Rich and Chris share practical tools like the contextual radar, the trade‑off matrix, and the concept of “do less, better” to help leaders focus their time, resources, and attention where they can create the most value. They also discuss the Strategic Quotient (SQ), the power of saying no, and why monotasking might be one of the most underrated habits for better thinking.
Leaders who feel stuck in tactics or overwhelmed by competing priorities, this episode offers a realistic path to building strategic thinking into the rhythm of daily work—not just the annual planning cycle.
In this episode, we cover:
* Why so many leaders feel “too tactical” and what to do about it.
* The difference between strategic planning and strategic thinking—and why the distinction matters.
* Strategy as “how”: a simple way to explain strategy to your team and separate it from tactics.
* The importance of focus, subtraction, and “do less, better” in an overcommitted environment.
* Tools like the trade‑off matrix (“eliminate, decrease, increase, create”) and the contextual radar (market, customers, competitors, company).
* Strategic thinking as both mindset and skill, and how Rich’s Strategic Quotient (SQ) helps measure and develop it.
* Innovation as “creating new value” and why it is everyone’s job, not just R&D’s.
* The case against multitasking and how monotasking can improve energy and decision quality.
* How AI can serve as a thinking partner and time‑saver—without replacing strategic thinking.
* Why new growth requires new thinking, and how to build a habit of introducing at least one new tool or framework each month.
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Guest bio
Rich Horwath is a strategist, author, and CEO who has spent more than 25 years helping leaders think, plan, and act strategically on a daily basis. He is the creator of the Strategic Quotient (SQ) and has written multiple books, articles, and tools focused on making strategy practical and accessible for leaders at every level. Rich’s mission is to help leaders outthink the competition and build organizations where strategic thinking is part of everyday work, not an annual event.
Resources mentioned
* Rich’s books articles, tools, and videos: https://www.strategyskills.com/ [https://www.strategyskills.com/]
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