Two Speeds, One Team: Keeping Weekly Work Aligned With Strategy
Find out how to balance fast-moving weekly execution with long-term strategic alignment so teams stay focused on the bigger picture.
Ella Navarro
Head of Finance Ops
Table of contents
Share
Tuesday, 9:07 a.m.
A short note lands in our planning channel: “Two slices shipped yesterday, procurement wording blocked one. Swapping order so Friday’s demo still holds.” No drama. No “jump on a call?” ping. Strategy breathes; execution moves.
That’s the shape we’re after—direction that lasts longer than a sprint, paired with a weekly rhythm that actually gets things out the door.
The hard part isn’t ambition. It’s translation. Annual goals live in slides; real work lives in tickets. If the interface between those two is fuzzy, momentum evaporates and everyone is “busy” without moving the needles that matter.
We fixed the interface, not the people.
How our week actually feels
Mondays start with intent in plain language: three outcomes per team, not a shopping list. Each has a first slice already assigned, so momentum starts before lunch. Leaders edit for sharpness, not style points. Then Slack goes quiet and keyboards take over.
Midweek, we look for friction early. A 20-minute risk check—with the right reviewers, not a crowd—catches the surprises that usually appear on Thursday night. Most items take five minutes. The goal isn’t red tape; it’s cleaner launches and fewer “urgent” threads.
Fridays are demos with numbers. We tell a short story: what changed for the customer, what we learned, and what comes next. Disciplined rollbacks get the same applause as launches, because good judgment is progress.
Strategy stays compact on purpose. Quarterly “bets” fit on a page: the customer problem, the lever we’ll pull, the leading indicators we’ll watch, and the first two weeks of work. If a task can’t trace back to a bet—and therefore to an outcome—it waits. Harsh on paper, merciful in practice.
Capacity is published like a budget. Names, allocations, the bets they’re on. When priorities change, the ledger changes. Debate the trade-off, not the physics.
Ownership is singular. Every bet has a directly responsible individual, empowered to decide after listening well. High-impact calls get a one-page decision record and a review date. We also agree on stop rules up front, so when something crosses its line, we stop and redeploy without guilt.
What we’ll change this month
Replace sprawling status meetings with short memos; meet live only to decide, and cap at 25 minutes.
Keep a living capacity ledger so trade-offs are visible when priorities shift.
Choose two or three leading indicators per bet that a small team can move within 14 days—and lock definitions.
Use one-page decision records with a scheduled review date and explicit kill criteria.
Map every backlog item to a bet tied to an outcome. If it doesn’t map, it waits.
None of this is flashy. It’s steady, almost boring by design. That’s the point. Predictability frees energy for the work itself, while the strategy layer keeps us from mistaking activity for progress.
And when the note lands at 9:07 a.m., everyone knows what to do next.