Strategic Planning

Unanchored: Rethinking Strategy in the Age of Self-Defined Purpose

  • May 2025
  • By Kohki Sakata (CEO, IGPI Singapore)
In a world where purpose is no longer given but must be defined, strategy faces a profound identity crisis. Organizations and individuals alike can no longer rely on inherited blueprints for success. As traditional goals lose their clarity and relevance, the challenge is no longer just about execution—it’s about orientation.
This article examines how strategy must evolve from a playbook of tactics into a tool for meaning-making, and how leaders must shift from navigators of terrain to designers of direction in a world increasingly shaped by self-defined purpose.
IGPI Advisory

Strategy: From ‘How’ to ‘Why’

There was a time when purpose was prepackaged. Life followed a script: study hard, land a job, buy a house, and retire in comfort. Meaning was socially constructed and widely shared. To succeed, one simply followed the rules.

That era has passed. Today, individuals are freer-perhaps even too free. With tradition in retreat and institutions in flux, the burden of defining meaning has shifted from systems to selves. We are no longer choosing between clear paths; instead, we are now tasked with inventing them. Strategy, which was once a question of how, has become a question of why.

As collective beliefs dissolve, a peculiar phenomenon emerges: the elevation of tactics into ideology. When the destination is uncertain, people cling to the map. Education becomes sacred. Wealth becomes virtue. Process becomes principle. In this void, the means are often mistaken for the ends.

In corporate life, this appears as process worship: the KPI becomes king, and the playbook becomes scripture. In parenting, it emerges as academic fundamentalism. In governance, it breeds procedural paralysis.

These are not strategies; they are symptoms of strategic disorientation.

In simpler times, such patterns worked. When “success” meant job security, or when “happiness” was synonymous with home ownership, fixed methods were efficient. Today, however, those outcomes have become abstract. We now speak of self-actualization, personal meaning, and authenticity. These are concepts too fluid for rigid tools. Yet many still chase metrics that no longer measure anything real.

Optimizing For Better, or Deciding What Matters

This shift marks a profound transformation in the nature of strategic work. In the industrial age, strategy meant optimization: doing known things better. In the post-industrial age, it means orientation. The focus is now on deciding which things matter at all.

Japan is a case in point. Despite its safety, infrastructure, and relative prosperity, it consistently ranks low on global happiness indices. The explanation cannot be material; it is existential. The answer lies in the gap between the measurable and the meaningful.

Even branding reflects this shift. Once built on functional and emotional value, modern brands now trade in identity. Products are no longer merely useful or delightful; they are aspirational. They promise not just performance, but transformation. In this new “purpose economy,” the product is not the object itself. Instead, it is the self the object allows us to become.

Transitioning Leadership from Navigating to Designing Direction

The implications for leadership are profound. Strategy must now account not just for markets or operations, but also for mindsets. Leaders are no longer navigators of terrain. They are designers of direction, responsible for holding space for ambiguity, stewarding identity, and anchoring people in a world where everything-including purpose-must be self-defined.

This shift brings risk. In systems built for predictability, ambiguity can be destabilizing. In cultures of bottom-up consensus, belief in method becomes deeply ingrained. In top-down systems, rapid pivots are possible, but often come at the cost of depth and coherence. Each approach has strengths, but both risk misalignment in a world where context evolves faster than culture.

What is needed is not new ideology, but strategic adaptability. Organizations must develop the ability to reconfigure structures, not just goals. We need systems that can learn and evolve.

A Call to Stewardship

The old question, “What should we do?” must now be preceded by a harder one: “What are we aiming for?” That question cannot be answered by data alone. It requires judgment, perspective, and, above all, thoughtful design.

In this new landscape, the manager is no longer simply a planner. She is a philosopher with a P&L. The strategist is no longer just a tactician. He is a curator of collective meaning. It is no longer about finding the fastest route. It is about deciding what is truly worth the journey.

Strategy, in short, has become stewardship.


To find out more about how IGPI Group can provide support for businesses, browse through our insight articles or get in contact with us.  


About the author

Kohki Sakata, CEO of IGPI Singapore
After joining Cap Gemini and Coca Cola, Kohki joined Revamp Corporation where he managed projects on global expansion and turnaround in various sectors including F&B, healthcare, retail, IT, etc. After joining IGPI, he has managed projects mainly on global expansion and cross border M&A in various sectors such as logistics, IT, telecom, retail, etc. In addition to his broad experience in implementing solutions that has been developed in Western countries, he has developed multiple methods to turnaround Asian companies with focus on setting clear vision and employee empowerment. Kohki has proven the practicality of these methods by turning around Asian companies not only as an advisor but also as senior management.
He graduated from Waseda University Department of Political Science and Economics and IE Business School.

 About IGPI

IGPI Group is a Japan rooted premium management consulting & Investment Group headquartered in Tokyo with a footprint in Osaka, Singapore, Hanoi, Shanghai & Melbourne, as well as parts of Europe and India. The organization was established in 2007 by former members of the Industrial Revitalization Corporation of Japan (IRCJ), a USD 100 billion sovereign wealth fund focusing on turn-around projects in Japan. IGPI Group has 13 institutional investors, including Nomura Holdings, SMBC, KDDI, Recruit & Sumitomo Corporation to name a few. IGPI Group has vast experience in supporting Fortune 500s, Govt. agencies, Universities, SMEs and funded startups across Asia and beyond for their strategic business needs and hands-on support across a wide variety of industries. IGPI group has ~8,500 employees on a consolidated basis.

* This material is intended merely for reference purposes based on our experience and is not intended to be comprehensive and does not constitute as advice. Information contained in this material has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but IGPI does not represent or warrant the quality, completeness, and accuracy of such information. All rights reserved by IGPI.