A well-designed business strategy connects ambition with execution, identifying key strategic projects and defining a pathway to utilise limited resources to best deliver against an organisation’s purpose.
Even the best strategy cannot become a reality without effective communication, however there is an additional element that has the power to take it to another level - visualisation of your strategy.
Many businesses invest significant effort to develop business strategy, but it is only when well articulated to the workforce and other key stakeholders that it starts to gain traction. Visualisation can play a key role to ensure strategy is seen, understood, and acted on by audiences.
The value of visualisation
Visual representation of your strategy can have a meaningful impact on the way it is consumed, understood, and deployed by your internal audience; how it influences and inspires your external audience; and, how it motivates and drives your stakeholder and investor reaction. Visualisation of your strategy helps:
- Make complex plans memorable and shareable
- Align leadership and teams
- Better decision making and prioritising
- Achieve greater stakeholder confidence and buy in; and
- Adoption of strategic initiatives, by helping people understand how their work contributes to business success.
In a review of 654 acquisition presentations, researchers identified one clear factor linked to success - the inclusion of a compelling visualisation. Presentations that illustrated the strategic rationale for a deal were more than twice as likely to generate a positive investor response. The effect was substantial, with post-announcement valuations four times higher when a clear strategy visual was used compared with standard visuals such as bar or line charts[1].
Design Principles
However, not all strategic visualisations are effective. The value lies not just in having a visual, but in how well it communicates the story. The goal is to make information easy to follow, meaningful, visually balanced and not to overcomplicate it. The following principles can guide how a business strategy is brought to life on the page or screen.
1. Focus on what matters most
Start by refining your key strategic ideas - ideally three or four central concepts. Too much information can dilute the message.
2. Create a clear visual hierarchy
Use typography, colour and layout to show what’s most important. Keep fonts and sizes consistent, use colour to connect information (not just to decorate), and align elements neatly on a grid for balance and flow.
3. Structure information logically
Group related topics together and build from high-level concepts down to detail. A well-layered layout helps people follow the logic, see relationships and understand how actions or timelines connect.
4. Choose the right layout
Select the composition that best suits the content and how it will be used - portrait, square or landscape. The right format helps readers scan and absorb information naturally.
5. Match the format to the message
Decide whether your visual should be static, animated or interactive. Each format offers a different level of engagement, depending on how and where the information will be shared.
Why is it important?
Good visual communication is processed much faster than text. Applying effort and investing into visualising your strategy can significantly strengthen the clarity of your message, recognition and retention of key concepts and structures, and give you a significant competitive edge.
A clear, well-understood strategy inspires confidence, drives results and builds reputation.
How can you make this happen?
Consider how much your strategy is, or potentially is, worth to your business. This will help realise the appropriate level of investment in how it is developed, presented, and deployed.
When developing a business strategy, think of it as a framework and build structure and simplicity into its communication.
Tie a strategy visualisation into your strategy launch. The visual then acts as an ongoing signpost in the future when you are providing updates to employees or investors regarding progress against strategy.
Lastly, consider engaging with a design agency partner. A professional studio can improve the quality and value of your visuals – quite often it can make process more efficient, clearer, and provide a better return on investment.
[1] You Should Be Able to Boil Your Strategy Down to a Single Clear Visualization, João Cotter Salvado and Freek Vermeulen, Harvard Business Review, July-August 2025
