In Chapter 2 of Rhythm: How to Achieve Breakthrough Execution and Accelerate Growth, author Patrick Thean dives deeper into “winning moves” – the small number of big bets that will drive most of your revenue growth. These are the pivots, new offerings, or business models that, through focused execution, could potentially double your company’s revenue in just 3-5 years. It is a section of your 3-year business plan focused on growth. This chapter provides practical advice for uncovering and prioritizing your next winning moves.
A winning move is not about incrementally tweaking your existing business. It represents a potential step change in growth. Properly sequenced and executed winning moves can rapidly accelerate your revenue curve. As Thean writes: “Winning moves drive revenue growth. Specifically, winning moves should double your revenue – 2X your business – in three to five years.”
Winning moves rely on capabilities, infrastructure, and know-how you already possess. They do not require massive outside investment or acquisitions to launch. Force-fitting moves requiring large capital infusions risk overextension. Thean summarizes it well: “They are your company’s leading indicator for future revenue growth and financial health. Conversely, the lack of winning moves is the leading indicator that you will hit the growth wall.”
Winning moves rarely emerge fully formed overnight. More often, they begin as seeds of ideas that, when cultivated, can blossom into transformative growth opportunities.
Thean suggests looking for potential winning moves by analyzing:
Asking these questions across your leadership team may uncover winning moves already latent within your business.
Not every idea or brainstorm translates into a winning move. Once you generate candidate moves, you need a process to pressure-test them objectively. Patrick Thean recommends assessing each potential move on two dimensions:
By scoring each move on these two axes, you can quickly prioritize those with the optimal mix of high revenue impact and low complexity. Thean refers to moves with maximum revenue potential but greater implementation difficulty as “moat moves” – expensive but able to create a defensible competitive advantage if you can afford the investment.
Two common traps slow companies down when it comes to resourcing winning moves:
Ask whether a move will measurably move the revenue needle and leverage existing assets. If not, it likely doesn’t deserve to be a priority focus.
The key lessons from this chapter include:
Companies can’t afford to stand still in today's disruptive business environment. Rhythm: How to Achieve Breakthrough Execution and Accelerate Growth Chapter 2 provides a blueprint for continuously evolving strategy through well-defined winning moves.
How to Grow Your Business: Add a Winning Move to Your Business Plan
Create 3 Year Strategic Plans with Revenue Growth
Mastering the Rockefeller Habits One-Page Strategic Plan (OPSP)
Revenue Growth Goals: Use the Rhythm of Work to Achieve Them