Business Strategy: A guide to effective decision-making (Economist Books)

The effectiveness of a good strategy well implemented determines a business' future success or failure. Yet history is full of strategic decisions, big and small, that were ill-conceived, poorly organized and consequently disastrous. This updated guide looks at the whole process of strategic decisio...
Once you’re past day-to-day tactics, the question becomes strategy, and this Economist guide is a clear, jargon-free primer on it. Strategy, at its heart, is deciding where to compete and how to win — and just as importantly, what not to do.
The book covers the essentials of strategic thinking: analyzing your market and competitors, choosing where to play, building durable advantage, and making sound decisions under uncertainty. It’s written in the Economist’s plain, credible style, with no buzzwords or guru theatrics, which makes it useful whether you’re steering a side project or a real company.
Key takeaways:
- Strategy is a set of deliberate choices, especially about what to decline.
- Sustainable advantage comes from positioning, not from working harder than rivals.
- Good decisions under uncertainty rely on frameworks, not gut feeling alone.
Who it’s for: founders and managers who’ve been making decisions by instinct and want a structured way to think about competition and direction.
The verdict: a solid, practical foundation in strategic thinking without the consultant fog. It pairs well with The Personal MBA for fundamentals and The Effective Executive for execution. If you’re starting to make bigger bets and want to make them on purpose rather than by reflex, this is a dependable place to build that muscle.
