Prøve GULL - Gratis

Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability

MIT Sloan Management Review

|

Fall 2025

Sustained performance requires a company purpose that is validated in the market.

- By Jonathan Trevor

Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability

FOR MANY LEADERSHIP TEAMS AND boards, discussions about a business’s corporate purpose are mired in conflict. All too often, the participants position purpose and profit as opposing priorities — and, in doing so, sideline purpose as an indispensable driver of strategic alignment and sustainable performance.

A corporation with no avowed purpose other than to earn profits for shareholders is a hollow endeavor — one with no guiding star for formulating strategy and little to encourage the intrinsic motivation that is critical for employees to perform at their best. At the same time, highly idealistic statements of company purpose that managers and employees perceive as disconnected from their day-to-day work likely function as little more than window dressing.¹

At an enterprise level, purpose and profitability are both vital components of a strategic alignment equation that defines a company’s raison d’être, how it is striving to fulfill its purpose against the demands of the marketplace, and how it defines and measures success.

While profit is an important measure of a company executing its purpose well, it can never be the purpose itself. An enterprise’s purpose is what it exists to do as an organization, and why doing it well matters. A wellunderstood and meaningful purpose should be a unifying force common to all within and without the enterprise. It helps employees intuitively understand why they matter in the larger context.² It also provides the ultimate definition of strategic success, which should never be confused with measures of success — including profitability.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Formalize Escalation Procedures to Improve Decision-Making

Conflict is inevitable. A systematic approach to escalation helps organizations manage disagreements efficiently and make better decisions.

time to read

11 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

A New Method for Assessing Circular Business Cases

Conventional business analysis overlooks the costs and new revenue sources found in circular approaches.

time to read

11 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Building Innovation Teams Across National Borders

Restrictive immigration policies are forcing multinational enterprises to rethink their R&D strategies. Here are four approaches to maintain innovation excellence with geographically dispersed teams.

time to read

14 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability

Sustained performance requires a company purpose that is validated in the market.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

The Hidden Costs of Coding With Generative Al

Generative Al can boost coding productivity, but careless deployment creates technical debt that cripples scalability and destabilizes systems.

time to read

6 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

Aligning Strategy and Skills

\"DO WE HAVE THE PEOPLE WE need to successfully execute our strategic plan?” That’s a perennial middle-of-the-night worry for business leaders.

time to read

1 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Should You Recruit New People, or Upskill Your Workforce?

I worry that we don't have the skills in-house that we need to seize future opportunities.

time to read

2 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

The High Cost of Executives' Intellectual Property Blind Spots

Strategic business decisions often involve intellectual property, but senior managers' understanding of salient issues is often limited.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

How the EU's Taxonomy Combats Greenwashing

The European Union's criteria for identifying green activities can be a better guide than standard ESG measures.

time to read

7 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

A Data-Driven Approach to Advancing Meritocracy

Instead of simply relying on best practices, employers should adopt a talent management strategy that addresses bias and inequity while ensuring efficient, fair, and merit-based decisions.

time to read

16 mins

Fall 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size