Introduction

The Strategic Response Model provides a formalised structure for capturing how an organisation responds to external triggers, internal performance insights, and proactive strategic initiatives. It links these drivers to organisational reasoning (rationales) and defines the actions taken across strategic, policy, capability, and initiative domains. By making these relationships explicit, the model supports traceability, alignment, and accountability across the business architecture.

Each strategic response includes references to the triggers that prompted the change or the strategic intents that initiated it, along with the rationales that explain the basis for the response. Responses are associated with affected domains and are monitored through linked performance indicators, which define what success looks like and how progress is measured. These indicators support ongoing evaluation by including target values, baseline comparisons, timeframes, and data sources, enabling continuous assessment of strategic effectiveness.

This model supports continuous strategic alignment by documenting why a change occurred, how it was rationalised, and what was impacted and by how much—across strategies, capabilities, initiatives, policy, and organisational units.

Components of the strategic response model

The Strategic Response Model (SRM) links both proactive intentions and observed conditions—external and internal—to formal responses across Strategy, Capabilities, Policy, Initiatives, and other domains. It is comprised of four core elements:

This structured model enables traceable, auditable, and adaptive decision-making throughout the organisation.

Purpose

The SRM strengthens strategic governance by ensuring that:

Structure

Each Strategic Response includes:

Affected domains

Strategic responses typically impact one or more of the following domains:

Impacted organisational units

The impactedUnits array uses standardised relationship roles (as defined in the Inter-unit Domain Relationships model). See: Inter-unit domain relationships

Strategic intent model

The Strategic Intent Model provides a structured approach for capturing proactive, forward-looking strategic initiatives that drive organizational change. Unlike triggers which are reactive in nature, strategic intents represent deliberate organizational choices to pursue opportunities for innovation, growth, efficiency, or other strategic advantages.

Relationship with strategic responses

Strategic Intents have a one-to-many relationship with Strategic Responses. A single intent can spawn multiple coordinated responses across different domains and organizational units. This relationship is bidirectional, as Strategic Responses reference the Strategic Intent that initiated them through the intentReferences field.

Intent register

The organization maintains a Strategic Intent Register that catalogs all proactive strategic initiatives. This register enables:

Strategic context and relationships

Each Strategic Response now includes these properties to capture the strategic context and relationships:

Purpose - Enhanced Benefits

The enhanced Strategic Response Model further strengthens strategic governance by ensuring that:

Relationship with rationales

Rationales play an important role in classifying and organising strategic responses and intents. Ensure that the trigger catalogue and strategic intent register—which lists common environmental or operational triggers and proactive intentions prompting strategic responses—are up to date. Reference to the trigger catalogue and strategic intent register within this page ensures that rationales are accurately categorised based on their initiating context, improving traceability from external or internal stimuli through to strategic objectives, initiatives, and performance metrics.

Trigger catalogue reference

Responses reference a trigger selected from a standardised catalogue of events, trends, or insights. This ensures consistency in classifying causes of change and enables systemic analysis across responses.

Domain-Specific Response Models

The Strategic Response Model has been extended to address domain-specific needs in Customer, Market, Finance, Risk Management, Supply Chain, Innovation, Sustainability, People, Technology, and Channel domains. These extensions provide specialized properties and enumerations to capture the unique aspects of strategic responses in each domain.

Customer-Related Strategic Responses

Customer-related strategic responses focus on addressing customer needs, behaviors, and journeys. They include specialized properties such as:

Market-Related Strategic Responses

Market-related strategic responses address competitive positioning, market opportunities, or industry shifts. They include properties such as:

Finance-Related Strategic Responses

Finance-related strategic responses focus on financial structures, investments, or resource allocation. They include properties such as:

Risk Management-Related Strategic Responses

Risk-related strategic responses address risk prevention, mitigation, or transfer. They include properties such as:

Supply Chain-Related Strategic Responses

Supply chain-related strategic responses focus on network design, supplier relationships, or logistics optimization. They include properties such as:

Innovation-Related Strategic Responses

Innovation-related strategic responses focus on idea generation, experimentation, and innovation capabilities. They include properties such as:

Sustainability-Related Strategic Responses

Sustainability-related strategic responses focus on environmental, social, and governance dimensions. They include properties such as:

People-Related Strategic Responses

People-related strategic responses focus on workforce, culture, and organizational capabilities. They include properties such as:

Technology-Related Strategic Responses

Technology-related strategic responses focus on systems, infrastructure, and technical standards. They include properties such as:

Channel-Related Strategic Responses

Channel-related strategic responses focus on distribution networks, partners, and customer touchpoints. They include properties such as: