Why Your Strategy Never Reaches the Shop Floor Every CEO has a strategy. Almost none have a system that establishes goals, deploys them to every management unit and every process, and ensures results are achieved — daily — without the CEO in the room. Management by Guidelines is the first tier of TMCS™: where leadership defines the vital few objectives that govern everything below.
The Problem
You Have a Strategy Document. You Don't Have Strategic Management. Most companies produce a strategy once a year. It lives in a PowerPoint, gets presented at a leadership offsite, and is forgotten by February. The objectives are too many (15? 20?), too vague ("improve customer satisfaction"), and disconnected from the decisions managers make every day.
The result: managers set their own priorities. Departments drift. When two objectives conflict, nobody knows which one wins. Decisions get escalated because there are no rules for resolving trade-offs. The CEO becomes the bottleneck — not because they want to be, but because the system forces them to be.
ISO 9001 was supposed to fix this. Clause 4 requires you to understand your context. Clause 5 requires leadership commitment. Clause 6 requires objectives. But the way most consultants implement these clauses — as isolated compliance exercises — guarantees they won’t connect to how your business actually operates.
When everything is a priority, nothing gets managed. The strategic level of TMCS™ exists to solve exactly this: define the 3–5 objectives that actually matter, build the measurement system that tracks them, and create the decision rules that govern every level below.
Leadership Defines Direction
This is not a one-page quality policy. The Plan phase is a full strategic planning process: analyse your external and internal context, identify risks and opportunities, define the 3–5 objectives that will drive the business, set measurable targets, and allocate resources. Every strategic planning tool — SWOT, PESTEL, Porter’s Five Forces, Balanced Scorecard, Value Chain Analysis — has a role here. The Plan phase produces the guidelines that govern every decision at every level below.
Guidelines Cascade Downward
The strategic guidelines are deployed to the Tactical Level through structured dialogue — not top-down mandates. Each manager negotiates targets with the level above. Resources are allocated. Competence gaps are identified and closed. The infrastructure that enables execution is built.
Measure Against Plan
Strategic KPIs are monitored quarterly. Management review evaluates whether the strategy is producing the intended results. Customer satisfaction trends, financial performance, process effectiveness, and competitive position are all assessed — not as audit exercises, but as genuine management intelligence.
Adjust the System
When strategic results deviate from plan, corrective action is taken at the strategic level. This might mean reallocating resources, adjusting objectives, changing competitive approach, or restructuring the deployment to Tactical. Innovation and improvement feed into the next planning cycle.
The Architecture
A Full PDCA Cycle — At the Strategic Level The Strategic Level isn't a checklist. It's a complete management cycle. Leadership plans, the organisation executes, results are measured against plan, and deviations trigger corrective action. This cycle repeats annually — with quarterly reviews that keep it alive between planning cycles.
Deep Dive: The Plan Phase
What Strategic Planning Actually Requires — Clause by Clause ISO 9001 doesn't just say "have a strategy." Clauses 4, 5, and 6 define a rigorous strategic planning process. The problem is that most implementations reduce each clause to a one-page document for the auditor. Here's what they're actually asking for — and the tools that make each clause operational.
Context of the Organisation — External & Internal Issues
This is where strategic planning begins. External: what political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental forces are shaping your market? Which competitors are gaining ground and why? What regulatory changes are coming? Internal: what are your genuine strengths — not the ones you put on the website, but the ones that actually create competitive advantage? Where are you structurally weak? What capability gaps exist that nobody wants to admit?
The output is not a generic SWOT taped to a wall. It’s a living strategic assessment that leadership uses to make resource allocation and priority decisions.
Interested Parties — Needs & Expectations
Beyond customers and regulators: employees, shareholders, suppliers, banks, local communities, industry bodies. Each has needs and expectations that can enable or destroy your strategy. The mature approach is to map their power, influence, and requirements — then determine which requirements become obligations your management system must address.
Leadership — Direction, Commitment, Policy
This is where vision, mission, and values become operational. Not framed posters in reception — decision-making criteria that every manager can apply. The quality policy isn’t a paragraph for the auditor. It’s the expression of leadership’s intent that shapes every objective, every resource decision, every trade-off made at every level.
ISO 9004 goes further: leadership should define the organisation’s identity — its mission (why we exist), vision (where we’re going), values (how we behave), and culture (how things actually work here). These aren’t soft exercises. They’re the strategic inputs that make Clause 6 objectives meaningful.
Planning — Risks, Opportunities, Objectives
This is the heart of Management by Guidelines. From the context analysis (4.1), stakeholder requirements (4.2), and leadership direction (5), the organisation distils the vital few strategic objectives. Not 20 goals in a strategy document — 3 to 5, with measurable targets, clear ownership, defined timelines, and allocated resources. Each objective is translated into control items (the results you measure) and check items (the leading indicators you monitor).
Risk and opportunity assessment flows directly from the SWOT synthesis. The Balanced Scorecard ensures objectives aren’t just financial — they span customer, process, and learning perspectives. OKRs provide a cascadable structure that connects strategic intent to departmental action.
Support — The Bridge to Tactical
Clause 7 is the enablement layer. You can’t deploy strategic guidelines to a manager who lacks competence, resources, communication channels, or documented processes. This clause ensures the Tactical Level has everything it needs to run its own PDCA cycle: trained people, functioning infrastructure, defined communication protocols, and the documented information that makes the system reproducible.
At the Strategic Level, Clause 7 is a preparation exercise. At the Tactical Level, it becomes the operational backbone. This dual role is why it bridges the two.
Deep Dive: The Plan Phase
One System. Three Scopes. Two Different Cycles. The ISO consulting industry maps ISO 9001's clauses to one flat PDCA cycle applied once to the whole organisation. That's why their implementations fail. The standard is actually one system applied at three different scopes — with the Strategic and Tactical levels running the same clause set at different zoom levels, and the Operational level running a fundamentally different cycle.
Strategic Level
Management by Guidelines
Clauses 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10. Full strategic planning. Scope: the entire organisation. The CEO and leadership team define the vital few. Annual cycle, quarterly reviews.
Tactical Level
Guideline Deployment
Same clauses. Same PDCA structure. But scope is restricted: a region, a department, a business unit. Each manager runs their own context analysis, their own objectives — derived from the strategic guidelines.
Strategic Level
Daily Work Routine Management
Clause 8 only. Default cycle is SDCA: Standardise, Do, Check, Act. PDCA only activates when the standard itself needs to change. The shop floor maintains — it doesn’t plan.
Maturity Progression
Where Is Your Strategic Management Today? Based on ISO 9004's maturity model, most organisations score Level 1–2 on strategic management — even with ISO 9001 certification. The standard gets the certificate. TMCS™ gets the management system.
In Practice
What This Looks Like in Your Business Theory is worth nothing without application. Here's how Management by Guidelines changes the day-to-day reality of running a mid-market company.
Before TMCS™
The CEO calls a Monday meeting to announce Q3 priorities
Fifteen objectives on a PowerPoint. No ownership assigned. No measurement defined. By Wednesday, the operations director is focused on a production crisis. The sales director is chasing a deal that contradicts the new strategy. The quality manager is preparing for an audit nobody else cares about.
By the end of the quarter, nobody can remember what the priorities were. The CEO is frustrated. The team is exhausted. The ISO certificate is renewed. Nothing has changed.
After TMCS™ — Strategic Level Active
Leadership defines 4 strategic guidelines for the year
Each guideline has a measurable target, a named owner, a defined review cadence, and clear decision rules for when priorities conflict. The SWOT and context analysis that produced these guidelines is documented — not for the auditor, but because next year’s planning cycle needs to compare against this year’s assumptions.
Find Out Where Your Strategic Management Stands
Our Management System Assessment scores your organisation against the full TMCS™ maturity model — including the Strategic Level architecture described on this page. 15 minutes. Zero obligation. Brutally honest.