Strategy Is Attitude: The Missing Half of Strategy

Strategy Is Attitude, by Ganzorig, is an ambitious and deeply personal reconsideration of what strategy really means. Rather than treating strategy as a corporate exercise built from goals, templates, and annual planning rituals, the book argues that strategy is an ancient human capacity rooted in responsibility, perception, and action under uncertainty. Ganzorig builds his case through Genghis Khan and the Mongol command system, presenting Temujin not merely as a conqueror but as the creator of a system that produced strategists from herders, former enemies, and ordinary riders. The book’s central framework, strategy as both process and attitude, rests on the conviction that situation analysis, customer perspective, giving, productivity, and responsibility are not soft virtues but the living machinery of strategic success.

What moved me most about the book was its insistence that strategy begins with seeing. Ganzorig’s examples often carry a quiet moral force, particularly the story of the freezing receptionist in the Ulaanbaatar office lobby. That moment could have been a minor workplace anecdote, but in his hands, it becomes a devastating miniature of strategic blindness. Everyone had walked past the problem. No one had felt it. I found that idea lingering with me, because it reframes strategy as something more intimate than intelligence and more difficult than planning. It asks whether a leader can perceive what others have learned not to notice. The book is at its strongest when it draws those connections between the grand and the ordinary, between Mongol armies moving across continents and a bank teller who understands customers better than an executive report ever could.

I admired the writing for its conviction, rhythm, and willingness to challenge comfortable assumptions. Ganzorig writes with a stern tenderness, one moment dismantling the emptiness of SWOT analysis or slogan-driven “digital transformation,” the next recalling childhood days spent herding animals with only a horse, weather, danger, and responsibility for the company. There are places where the argument presses hard, especially when the book’s confidence in its own framework leaves little room for ambiguity. That same forcefulness gives the book its uniqueness. Its ideas don’t feel assembled for a management seminar. They feel wrestled out of experience, sharpened by disappointment, and carried forward with genuine urgency.

I finished Strategy Is Attitude with the sense that I’d read not just a strategy book, but a book about moral attention. Its best insight is that strategy isn’t reserved for executives, generals, consultants, or the credentialed few; it belongs to anyone willing to carry responsibility for unclear outcomes and look at reality without flinching. This is a thoughtful, demanding, and often stirring work, and its concluding power lies in its belief that strategists are made, not born. I’d recommend it especially to leaders, entrepreneurs, educators, policymakers, and reflective readers who are tired of hollow strategic language and want a more human, disciplined, and consequential way to think about decisions.

Pages: 213 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GX3B589S

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on June 15, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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