This is our series of playbooks focused on the individual roles within organisations and particularly private and family businesses. This playbook presents five role-based stages of transformation: from defining direction, to translating strategy into execution, driving disciplined delivery, embedding engagement and alignment, and tracking value and sustaining outcomes.
Transformation is where strategy either creates value or destroys it. While most businesses invest heavily in defining strategy, far fewer succeed in executing it effectively. The result is lost value, stalled initiatives, and organisational fatigue.
For SMEs and family businesses, the stakes are even higher. Transformation must balance performance, legacy, and long-term sustainability. Success depends on clear roles, aligned behaviours, and disciplined execution shareholder and director, to management and team members.
Provide clarity on the strategy, as well as sponsorship for the transformation.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
Ideally you are only needed by the CEO to be present when it is most needed: to celebrate the wins; and to sponsor and support the efforts of the team who are responsible for the change.
Common failure
Changing strategic direction or revisiting strategy during execution, undermining clarity and momentum.
Translate strategy into a focused and achievable transformation agenda.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
A clear, focused plan with aligned stakeholders and disciplined prioritisation.
Common failure
Trying to satisfy all stakeholders, leading to overcommitment and diluted focus.
Deliver enterprise outcomes through aligned cross functional execution.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
A cohesive team aligned to enterprise value, not functional silos.
Common failure
Operating in silos or prioritising functional outcomes over whole of business value.
Ensure transformation is delivered on time, on track, and on value.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
A disciplined delivery engine that maintains momentum and resolves issues early.
Common failure
Becoming a reporting function rather than actively driving delivery outcomes.
Drive performance and objectivity in execution.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
Engaged leaders empowered to deliver outcomes irrespective of hierarchy.
Common failure
Disengaging due to unclear authority or perceived limitations in influence.
Translate transformation into day-to-day execution across teams.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
Consistent messaging and aligned team activity embedded into business as usual.
Common failure
Treating transformation as separate from core operations, resulting in poor adoption.
Ensure transformation delivers measurable and sustained value.
Key responsibilities
What good looks like
Clear visibility of value delivered with active management of performance gaps.
Common failure
Focusing on activity reporting rather than tracking and driving real value outcomes.
Transformation succeeds when roles are clear, accountability is strong, and behaviours are aligned to execution discipline.
The most common failure point is not strategy, but behaviour. Specifically, lack of focus, weak alignment, and inconsistent follow through.
If your transformation is not delivering the outcomes you expected, the issue is rarely strategy alone, it is how effectively it is being executed across roles, behaviours, and accountability.
At Active Directions, we work with SMEs and family businesses to clarify priorities, strengthen governance, and build the execution discipline required to turn transformation into measurable results.
If you would like to pressure test your current transformation or identify where value may be lost, we welcome a confidential discussion to help you accelerate outcomes and maximise impact.