The Question Problem in Strategy Meetings
I have sat in hundreds of strategy meetings. Most of them follow the same pattern: someone presents a slide deck, a few people ask clarifying questions, the group debates options, and the most senior person in the room makes the final call.
The result? Strategies built on assumptions nobody challenged, opportunities nobody noticed, and risks nobody discussed.
The problem is not the people in the room. It is the questions being asked.
Peter Drucker said it best: "The most serious mistakes are not being made as a result of wrong answers. The truly dangerous thing is asking the wrong question."
Great strategy does not come from great answers. It comes from great questions. Questions that force the team to think deeper, challenge assumptions, and confront uncomfortable truths.
Here are 21 questions, organized into seven categories, that will transform the quality of your next strategy meeting.
Category 1: Clarity Questions (Start Here)
These questions ensure everyone in the room is solving the same problem. You would be surprised how often leadership teams discover they have fundamentally different understandings of the challenge.
Question 1: "What problem are we actually trying to solve — and for whom?"
This sounds basic, but it is the most important question you can ask. Strip away the jargon and the slide decks. In one sentence, what is the problem? Who experiences it? How do they experience it?
If different people in the room give different answers, stop. You have found the real problem: misalignment.
Question 2: "If we do nothing, what happens in 12 months?"
This question establishes the cost of inaction. Many "urgent" strategy discussions are actually about problems that can wait. And many "nice to have" conversations are actually about threats that will become crises.
Question 3: "What would success look like — and how would we know we achieved it?"
If you cannot describe success in measurable terms, you are not ready to make strategic decisions. This question forces specificity and reveals hidden disagreements about what "winning" means.
Category 2: Assumption-Busting Questions
Every strategy is built on assumptions. Most of them are never stated, let alone tested. These questions surface hidden assumptions so you can decide which ones to accept and which ones to challenge.
Question 4: "What are we assuming that, if wrong, would make this strategy fail?"
This is the single most powerful question in strategic planning. It identifies the load-bearing assumptions — the ones that hold up the entire plan. If you can name them, you can test them.
Question 5: "What evidence do we have for this — and how recent is it?"
Strategies based on evidence from two years ago are strategies based on a different market. This question forces the team to distinguish between current evidence and historical assumptions.
Question 6: "What would our smartest competitor do if they were in our position?"
This question breaks the team out of their own perspective. It is a form of "red teaming" that surfaces blind spots and reveals competitive vulnerabilities.
Category 3: Customer Questions
Strategy divorced from customer reality is fiction. These questions ground your strategy in what actually matters.
Question 7: "If we asked our best customers why they chose us, what would they say?"
Not what you think they would say. Not what your sales team told you. What they would actually say. If you do not know, that is your first action item.
Question 8: "Who are the customers we should fire — and what would that free up?"
Not all customers are created equal. Some drain resources, distort strategy, and prevent you from serving your best customers well. Identifying them is strategic clarity.
Question 9: "What is the one thing our customers wish we did that we do not?"
This question often reveals the biggest growth opportunity. The answer usually surprises the product team.
Category 4: Resource Questions
Strategy without resource reality is wishful thinking. These questions ensure your strategy is grounded in what is actually possible.
Question 10: "If we could only do one thing this quarter, what would it be?"
Forced prioritization reveals true priorities. If the team cannot agree on one thing, you have a prioritization problem, not a strategy problem.
Question 11: "What are we going to stop doing to make room for this?"
Every new initiative requires resources. If you are not stopping something, you are not prioritizing — you are just adding. And adding without subtracting leads to mediocrity across the board.
Question 12: "What is this going to cost us — in time, money, and attention — that we are not accounting for?"
Hidden costs kill strategies. The obvious costs are in the budget. The hidden costs — management attention, team context-switching, technical debt, opportunity cost — are the ones that matter most.
Category 5: Risk Questions
Optimism bias is the silent killer of strategy. These questions ensure the team honestly assesses what could go wrong.
Question 13: "What is the biggest risk we are not talking about?"
Every meeting has elephants in the room. This question gives people permission to name them. The biggest risks are almost always the ones nobody wants to discuss.
Question 14: "If this fails, what will we wish we had done differently?"
This is a pre-mortem — imagining the future failure and working backward. Research by Gary Klein shows that pre-mortems increase the ability to identify reasons for future outcomes by 30%.
Question 15: "Is this a one-way door or a two-way door?"
Jeff Bezos popularized this framework. One-way doors (irreversible decisions) require careful analysis. Two-way doors (reversible decisions) should be made quickly. Most teams treat two-way doors like one-way doors, which kills speed.
Category 6: Alignment Questions
Strategy fails most often not in formulation but in execution. And execution fails because of misalignment. These questions surface alignment issues before they become execution failures.
Question 16: "Can everyone in this room explain our strategy in one sentence?"
If your leadership team cannot articulate the strategy simply and consistently, your frontline teams have no chance. Clarity at the top is a prerequisite for execution everywhere else.
Question 17: "What would have to be true for us to disagree on this decision?"
This question, from Roger Martin's "Playing to Win" framework, surfaces the conditions under which the team would make different choices. It reveals hidden disagreements and different mental models.
Question 18: "Who is not in this room that should be?"
Strategy made in isolation from the people who execute it is strategy that will fail. This question ensures you have the right voices in the conversation.
Category 7: Action Questions (End Here)
Strategy without action is just conversation. These questions ensure the meeting produces clear commitments.
Question 19: "What are we committing to — and by when?"
Vague commitments are not commitments. Every strategic decision should have a clear owner, clear deliverables, and a clear deadline.
Question 20: "How will we know in 30 days if we are on the right track?"
Long feedback loops kill strategy execution. This question establishes early indicators that let you course-correct quickly.
Question 21: "What is the one thing each of us will do this week to move this forward?"
This is the bridge between strategy and action. It creates personal accountability and immediate momentum.
How to Use These Questions
Do not ask all 21 questions in one meeting. That would take hours and exhaust the team. Instead:
For a 60-minute strategy meeting: Pick 3-5 questions from different categories. Start with Clarity, end with Action.
For a half-day strategy session: Use 8-10 questions. Spend more time on Assumption-Busting and Risk questions.
For an annual planning retreat: Use all 21 questions across multiple sessions. Give each category its own dedicated time.
Rules for asking powerful questions:
- Ask the question, then be silent. Do not fill the silence. The best answers come after 10-15 seconds of uncomfortable quiet.
- Do not lead the witness. Ask "What should we do?" not "Should we do X?"
- Follow up with "What else?" The first answer is usually the safe answer. The real insight comes on the second or third response.
- Write answers down. If it is not written, it did not happen.
- Revisit answers 90 days later. Were your assumptions correct? Were your commitments kept?
Why Hyperion Consulting Leads Strategy With Questions
At Hyperion Consulting, we believe that the quality of your strategy depends on the quality of your questions. Our strategy workshops and coaching sessions are built around powerful questioning frameworks that cut through assumptions, politics, and groupthink.
We do not come in with pre-built strategies. We come in with the right questions — and the facilitation skills to ensure your team engages with them honestly.
Ready to transform your next strategy meeting? Book a free consultation to discuss how we can facilitate your next strategic planning session.
